Titan's flat plains covered by organic snow layer

About 65 percent of Saturn's moon Titan consists of uniform flat plains likely coated in up to a meter of fluffy organic material from its atmosphere. Researchers analyzing radar data from NASA's Cassini spacecraft propose a two-layer surface model. This finding could inform future missions to the hazy moon.

Saturn's largest moon, Titan, features vast expanses of strangely smooth terrain covering roughly 65 percent of its surface. A new analysis of radar observations from the Cassini spacecraft, which orbited Saturn from 2004 to 2017, reveals these plains are blanketed by a porous layer of organic particles that fell from Titan's thick, hazy atmosphere like snow, according to Alexander Hayes at Cornell University and his colleagues. The layer, potentially centimeters to a meter thick, overlays harder ground beneath and has been shaped by rain, wind, and erosion over time. Hayes noted that standard radar models used for bodies like Earth's moon or Venus fail on Titan. “Titan is a different beast in terms of the radar-scattering properties of the surface,” he said. The radar waves bounced in ways fitting a soft, low-density cover over solid terrain, with organics from the atmosphere compacting after deposition. This discovery aids understanding of Titan's dynamic weather and surface evolution. NASA's Dragonfly mission, set to launch in 2028 and arrive in 2034, will directly measure these layers, essential for designing future landers on the moon. The research appears in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets.

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Astronomers have discovered that the outermost rings of Uranus, known as the mu and nu rings, differ markedly in composition despite their similar appearance. The mu ring consists of tiny ice grains, likely from a small icy moon, while the nu ring is rich in dust and organic molecules. These findings, drawn from two decades of telescope observations, raise new questions about the planet's dynamic ring system.

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A team of astronomers in Japan has discovered evidence of a faint atmosphere surrounding the small trans-Neptunian object 2002 XV93. Previously, only Pluto was known to retain an atmosphere among bodies beyond Neptune due to its stronger gravity. The finding, made via a rare stellar occultation on January 10, 2024 and published in Nature Astronomy, indicates a short-lived atmosphere requiring continuous replenishment.

NASA's James Webb Space Telescope has observed an unusually thick haze on the exoplanet Kepler-51d, obscuring its atmospheric composition. This super-puff planet, part of a rare low-density system around the star Kepler-51, challenges standard models of planetary formation. The findings, led by Penn State researchers, were published on March 16 in the Astronomical Journal.

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Nasa has released images captured by the Psyche spacecraft during its recent flyby of Mars. The photos were taken as the probe used the planet's gravity to adjust its trajectory toward the asteroid 16 Psyche.

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