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Liquid methane and ethane flow through a subterranean plumbing system on Titan,
which drains lakes and connects seas. That�s one of the first scientific results
from the latest, most complete map of the Saturnian moon�s topography.
Planetary scientist Paul Corlies of Cornell University and colleagues released the
map � based on all the data from NASA�s Cassini mission, which ended in September
(SN Online: 9/15/17) � in Geophysical Research Letters on December 2.
Titan, Saturn�s largest moon, hosts seas, lakes, clouds and rain � all composed of
hydrocarbons such as methane and ethane instead of water. The elevations of seas
and mountains across 9 percent of Titan�s surface were directly recorded by Cassini
as it flew past Titan over 13 years. The researchers had to infer altitudes for the
rest of the globe.
Compared with previous maps, the new one adds mountains in the southern hemisphere
and shows that Titan is more of a squashed sphere than previously thought.
Researchers can now use the map to build computer simulations of everything from
Titan�s atmosphere to its interior structure. �Within hours of the paper actually
being available online, people we�ve never collaborated with started contacting
[Corlies] to ask how to get the data,� says study coauthor Alexander Hayes, a
planetary scientist also at Cornell.
But the first study to use the map, also published December 2 in Geophysical
Research Letters, is research that Hayes has been working on for a decade. The work
shows that Titan has a sea level as well as the hydrocarbon equivalent of
groundwater � pores in subsurface rock are filled with liquid that can seep into
and between the lakes and seas.
�Looking for actual evidence that the lakes could be communicating was a
fundamental question from Cassini,� Hayes says. �This is the final paper that gives
the best evidence that it exists.�
His team analyzed the altitudes of Titan�s liquid bodies and found that the three
largest seas � Ligeia Mare, Kraken Mare and Punga Mare� are all about the same
elevation, just like Earth�s oceans. In other words, Titan has a sea level, Hayes
says. To maintain that uniformity, the seas must be connected through channels that
could be above or below ground.
The floors of the dry lake beds are at a higher elevation still. Hayes thinks that
may indicate that their liquid flowed into the filled polar lakes. Those
hydrological connections probably occur underground because there do not appear to
be enough connections on the surface. If scientists could dig deeper into a dry
lake, he predicts, they would hit liquid at the level of the filled lakes�
surfaces.
A remaining mystery is how the small polar lakes formed. Both the dry and filled
lakes have steep walls, flat floors and rims that rise above the surrounding ground
� features that lakes on Earth tend not to have. �They look like you went around
Titan�s polar region with a cookie cutter and cut out little shapes,� Hayes says.
His best guess is that the lakes are sinkholes (SN: 1/25/14, p. 14), which
collapsed when the bedrock material was dissolved out from under them. If true,
then Titan�s poles may be covered with a thick layer of a kind of solid that
hydrocarbons can dissolve, like acetylene. But sinkholes shouldn�t have raised
rims, so that theory doesn�t explain everything.
The researchers hope other investigators will have some new ideas. �We�re just
saying, these are all the observations. Please tell us how they fit together,�
Hayes says.
But she agrees that Hayes� groundwater theory makes sense. Seeing hydrological
systems on Titan that are similar to Earth�s �is satisfying, and helps to validate
that what we understand from the Earth should work on other bodies, regardless of
what the liquid is made of,� she says.