After multiple pictures of fog from Mars were released, the research team behind this new work wanted to know if it was possible to find fog using Huygens. Huygens was the European Space Agency’s lander, attached to NASA’s Cassini probe, that briefly survived on the surface of Titan in 2005.
“Ground fog on Titan has been seen before from orbit (Brown et al. 2009) so it’s not unexpected to find fog on the surface,” wrote York University postdoctoral researcher Christina Smith, the lead author of the study, in an email to Discovery News. “But it hadn’t been detected from the surface before, which is what we did in our research and why it’s exciting.”
Titan has very active weather, as shown by this infrared image of clouds near the south pole. Image taken by the Cassini spacecraft. |
“We evaluated possible origins. Clouds were considered, but no consistent movement across the frame was detected, so this is unlikely,” Smith wrote. “A superior mirage was considered, but there was no temperature inversion detected on descent so again, this is considered unlikely. We considered a background rise, but due to several considerations our most likely explanation (in our opinions) is that this feature is due to a fog bank rising and falling.”
Fog was first recorded on this moon in 2009. At the time, California Institute of Technology co-discoverer Mike Brown said fog must have happened because of high humidity; in other words, it had rained. Cold air is uncommon on Titan — although it likely can cool somewhat above a pool of evaporating methane — and there are no mountains high enough on the surface for fog.
Mars is also known to have fog. |
Read more at Discovery News
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