221 research outputs found
The fate of ethane in Titan's hydrocarbon lakes and seas
Ethane is expected to be the dominant photochemical product on Titan's
surface and, in the absence of a process that sequesters it from exposed
surface reservoirs, a major constituent of its lakes and seas. Absorption of
Cassini's 2.2 cm radar by Ligeia Mare however suggests that this north polar
sea is dominated by methane. In order to explain this apparent ethane
deficiency, we explore the possibility that Ligeia Mare is the visible part of
an alkanofer that interacted with an underlying clathrate layer and investigate
the influence of this interaction on an assumed initial ethane-methane mixture
in the liquid phase. We find that progressive liquid entrapment in clathrate
allows the surface liquid reservoir to become methane-dominated for any initial
ethane mole fraction below 0.75. If interactions between alkanofers and
clathrates are common on Titan, this should lead to the emergence of many
methane-dominated seas or lakes.Comment: Accepted for publication in Icaru
Radar sounding using the Cassini altimeter waveform modeling and Monte Carlo approach for data inversion observations of Titan's seas
Recently, the Cassini RADAR has been used as a sounder to probe the depth and constrain the composition of hydrocarbon seas on Saturn's largest moon, Titan. Altimetry waveforms from observations over the seas are generally composed of two main reflections: the first from the surface of the liquid and the second from the seafloor. The time interval between these two peaks is a measure of sea depth, and the attenuation from the propagation through the liquid is a measure of the dielectric properties, which is a sensitive property of liquid composition. Radar measurements are affected by uncertainties that can include saturation effects, possible receiver distortion, and processing artifacts, in addition to thermal noise and speckle. To rigorously treat these problems, we simulate the Ku-band altimetry echo received from Titan's seas using a two-layer model, where the surface is represented by a specular reflection and the seafloor is modeled using a facet-based synthetic surface. The simulation accounts for the thermal noise, speckle, analog-to-digital conversion, and block adaptive quantization and allows for possible receiver saturation. We use a Monte Carlo method to compare simulated and observed waveforms and retrieve the probability distributions of depth, surface/subsurface intensity ratio, and subsurface roughness for the individual double-peaked waveform of Ligeia Mare acquired by the Cassini spacecraft in May 2013. This new analysis provides an update to the Ku-band attenuation and results in a new estimate for its loss tangent and composition. We also demonstrate the ability to retrieve bathymetric information from saturated altimetry echoes acquired over Ontario Lacus in December 2008
Liquid filled canyons on Titan
In May 2013 the Cassini RADAR altimeter observed channels in Vid Flumina, a drainage network
connected to Titan’s second largest hydrocarbon sea, Ligeia Mare. Analysis of these altimeter echoes shows
that the channels are located in deep (up to ~570 m), steep-sided, canyons and have strong specular surface
reflections that indicate they are currently liquid filled. Elevations of the liquid in these channels are at the
same level as Ligeia Mare to within a vertical precision of about 0.7 m, consistent with the interpretation of
drowned river valleys. Specular reflections are also observed in lower order tributaries elevated above the
level of Ligeia Mare, consistent with drainage feeding into the main channel system
THEO Concept Mission: Testing the Habitability of Enceladus's Ocean
Saturn's moon Enceladus offers a unique opportunity in the search for life
and habitable environments beyond Earth, a key theme of the National Research
Council's 2013-2022 Decadal Survey. A plume of water vapor and ice spews from
Enceladus's south polar region. Cassini data suggest that this plume, sourced
by a liquid reservoir beneath the moon's icy crust, contain organics, salts,
and water-rock interaction derivatives. Thus, the ingredients for life as we
know it-- liquid water, chemistry, and energy sources-- are available in
Enceladus's subsurface ocean. We have only to sample the plumes to investigate
this hidden ocean environment. We present a New Frontiers class, solar-powered
Enceladus orbiter that would take advantage of this opportunity, Testing the
Habitability of Enceladus's Ocean (THEO). Developed by the 2015 Jet Propulsion
Laboratory Planetary Science Summer School student participants under the
guidance of TeamX, this mission concept includes remote sensing and in situ
analyses with a mass spectrometer, a sub-mm radiometer-spectrometer, a camera,
and two magnetometers. These instruments were selected to address four key
questions for ascertaining the habitability of Enceladus's ocean within the
context of the moon's geological activity: (1) How are the plumes and ocean
connected? (2) Are the abiotic conditions of the ocean suitable for
habitability? (3) How stable is the ocean environment? (4) Is there evidence of
biological processes? By taking advantage of the opportunity Enceladus's plumes
offer, THEO represents a viable, solar-powered option for exploring a
potentially habitable ocean world of the outer solar system.Comment: JPL Summer School 201
Photometry of Kuiper belt object (486958) Arrokoth from New Horizons LORRI
On January 1st 2019, the New Horizons spacecraft flew by the classical Kuiper belt object (486958) Arrokoth (provisionally designated 2014 MU69), possibly the most primitive object ever explored by a spacecraft. The I/F of Arrokoth is analyzed and fit with a photometric function that is a linear combination of the Lommel-Seeliger (lunar) and Lambert photometric functions. Arrokoth has a geometric albedo of p_v = 0.21_(−0.04)^(+0.05) at a wavelength of 550 nm and ≈0.24 at 610 nm. Arrokoth's geometric albedo is greater than the median but consistent with a distribution of cold classical Kuiper belt objects whose geometric albedos were determined by fitting a thermal model to radiometric observations. Thus, Arrokoth's geometric albedo adds to the orbital and spectral evidence that it is a cold classical Kuiper belt object. Maps of the normal reflectance and hemispherical albedo of Arrokoth are presented. The normal reflectance of Arrokoth's surface varies with location, ranging from ≈0.10–0.40 at 610 nm with an approximately Gaussian distribution. Both Arrokoth's extrema dark and extrema bright surfaces are correlated to topographic depressions. Arrokoth has a bilobate shape and the two lobes have similar normal reflectance distributions: both are approximately Gaussian, peak at ≈0.25 at 610 nm, and range from ≈0.10–0.40, which is consistent with co-formation and co-evolution of the two lobes. The hemispherical albedo of Arrokoth varies substantially with both incidence angle and location, the average hemispherical albedo at 610 nm is 0.063 ± 0.015. The Bond albedo of Arrokoth at 610 nm is 0.062 ± 0.015
Feasibility of using microbeads with holographic barcodes to track DNA specimens in the clinical molecular laboratory
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