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Imaging of Titan from the Cassini spacecraft
Authors:Porco Carolyn C  Baker Emily  Barbara John  Beurle Kevin  Brahic Andre  Burns Joseph A  Charnoz Sebastien  Cooper Nick  Dawson Douglas D  Del Genio Anthony D  Denk Tilmann  Dones Luke  Dyudina Ulyana  Evans Michael W  Fussner Stephanie  Giese Bernd  Grazier Kevin  Helfenstein Paul  Ingersoll Andrew P  Jacobson Robert A  Johnson Torrence V  McEwen Alfred  Murray Carl D  Neukum Gerhard  Owen William M  Perry Jason  Roatsch Thomas  Spitale Joseph  Squyres Steven  Thomas Peter  Tiscareno Matthew  Turtle Elizabeth P  Vasavada Ashwin R  Veverka Joseph  Wagner Roland  West Robert
Institution:Cassini Imaging Central Laboratory for Operations, Space Science Institute, 4750 Walnut Street, Suite 205, Boulder, Colorado 80301, USA. carolyn@ciclops.org
Abstract:Titan, the largest moon of Saturn, is the only satellite in the Solar System with a substantial atmosphere. The atmosphere is poorly understood and obscures the surface, leading to intense speculation about Titan's nature. Here we present observations of Titan from the imaging science experiment onboard the Cassini spacecraft that address some of these issues. The images reveal intricate surface albedo features that suggest aeolian, tectonic and fluvial processes; they also show a few circular features that could be impact structures. These observations imply that substantial surface modification has occurred over Titan's history. We have not directly detected liquids on the surface to date. Convective clouds are found to be common near the south pole, and the motion of mid-latitude clouds consistently indicates eastward winds, from which we infer that the troposphere is rotating faster than the surface. A detached haze at an altitude of 500 km is 150-200 km higher than that observed by Voyager, and more tenuous haze layers are also resolved.
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