|
June
29, 2004 - Release 04-28
WINDS MEASURED ON SATURN'S MOON TITAN TO HELP ROBOT LANDER
On
top the windswept summit of a Hawaiian volcano, a NASA instrument attached
to the Japanese Subaru telescope measured distant winds raging on a strange
world -- Titan, the giant moon of Saturn -- to help the robotic Huygens
probe as it descends through Titan's murky atmosphere next January.
When combined with previous observations, new research with the Heterodyne
Instrument for Planetary Wind And Composition (HIPWAC) joined to the large
aperture of the Subaru telescope supports the model that Titan has currents
or jet streams at high latitudes racing through its upper atmosphere (stratosphere)
at speeds of approximately 756 km/hour (470 miles/hr.). The new observations
reveal that the wind travels in the same direction as Titan's rotation,
and that the stratospheric winds are milder (about 425 km/hr. or 264 miles/hr.)
near the equatorial regions, as the jet stream model predicts. HIPWAC
was designed and built at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt,
Md. The Subaru telescope is operated by the National Astronomical Observatory
of Japan.
Wind direction on Titan is difficult to measure remotely because Titans
upper atmosphere consists of an orange haze of hydrocarbons (molecules
of hydrogen and carbon) with no global features that show movement.
The observations were originally encouraged by the Cassini mission, an
international mission of NASA, the European Space Agency (ESA) and the
Italian Space Agency (ASI) that will employ a large robotic spacecraft
to explore Saturn and its system of 31 known moons beginning this July.
The Huygens probe, built by ESA, is attached to the Cassini spacecraft
and will separate in December on a 22-day course ending with a plunge
into Titan's atmosphere. NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena,
Calif., manages the Cassini mission for NASA.
"Our observations will complement local wind measurements by the
Huygens probe during its descent, because we offer a global view. Acquiring
the direction and speed of global winds is important for understanding
the dynamics of planetary atmospheres, particularly dynamics of those
bodies that rotate slowly on their axes. Titans 'day' is 16 Earth
days," said Dr. Theodor Kostiuk of NASA Goddard.
We hope to be able to repeat our success during the probes
descent so we can have detailed local information from Cassini and the
Huygens probe and a global portrait from HIPWAC and Subaru from the same
time," said Professor Hiroshi Karoji, Director of the Subaru telescope,
Mauna Kea, Hawaii.
Titan, the second largest moon in the solar system, is larger than the
planet Mercury and is the only known moon with a thick atmosphere, actually
1.5 times more dense than Earth's. Because it is far from the Sun, Titan
is extremely cold (surface temperature of about minus 178 Celsius (minus
289 Fahrenheit), allowing a hydrocarbon rain that may form gasoline-like
seas. Scientists are eager to explore Titan because its atmosphere may
resemble the Earth's atmosphere shortly after our planet's formation,
when it was rich with hydrocarbon molecules that became the building blocks
of life.
HIPWAC can measure wind speed and direction on Titan, even though the
moon's atmosphere lacks apparent features, because the instrument relies
instead on the faint, infrared glow of the hydrocarbons in Titan's atmosphere.
Infrared light, invisible to the human eye, can pass through Titan's hydrocarbon
haze and is detectable by special instruments. HIPWAC measures the very
slight color (frequency) change of the hydrocarbon's infrared light caused
by the motion of these molecules as they are carried by Titan's winds.
This is called a Doppler shift, and is similar to the change in tone of
an ambulance siren as it races by. Since the hydrocarbons are moved along
by Titan's winds, the Doppler shift of their emitted light gives the wind
velocity.
To measure such miniscule Doppler shifts, HIPWAC must be capable of distinguishing
among infrared colors, or frequencies, to a very fine degree. This is
called spectral resolution, and HIPWAC possesses a spectral resolution
200 times better than any instrument in regular use today. It also must
measure specific infrared frequencies very accurately, and HIPWAC can
identify a frequency to one part in a hundred million.
Subaru telescope brings to HIPWAC the light gathering power of a modern
large aperture telescope. Subarus 8.2-meter (27- foot) diameter
mirror is the largest single-piece mirror in the world that is currently
in regular operation. Since HIPWAC achieves its high spectral resolution
by finely dividing light into different frequencies, the more light it
has to work with the better. Other institutions contributing to this research
include the Challenger Center for Space Science Education, University
of Maryland, University of Hawaii, and the University of Cologne, Germany.
For images and more information, refer to:
http://www.gsfc.nasa.gov/topstory/2004/0615hipwac.html
Joint Subaru release:
http://www.naoj.org/Pressrelease/2004/06/29/index.html
For information about the Cassini mission, see:
http://www.nasa.gov/cassini
|