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Mission to Titan

Mission to Titan. Natalia Alvarez • Kelsey Bertamus • Michael Morgan • Talia Strait • Natalie Taylor. Bulk Characteristics of Titan. Diameter: 5,150 km Average Density: 1.88 g/cm 3 Surface Temperature: 97K Surface Pressure: 1.5 bars

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Mission to Titan

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  1. Mission to Titan Natalia Alvarez • Kelsey Bertamus •Michael Morgan • Talia Strait • Natalie Taylor

  2. Bulk Characteristics of Titan • Diameter: 5,150 km • Average Density: 1.88 g/cm3 • Surface Temperature: 97K • Surface Pressure: 1.5 bars • Theorized to have an interior liquid layer composed of ammonia and water ice

  3. Guide to Titan • Titan parallels early Earth • Lakes, Atmosphere, Clouds, Rain, Volcanoes, Plate Tectonics. • Only other body in solar system known to harbor stable liquids on its surface. • Weather cycle • Good indications for life or at the very least, pre-earth conditions.

  4. Atmosphere • Only known moon with an atmosphere. • 1.45 Denser than Earth’s • 1.19 times as massive. • Result of volcanism or microbial life. • Like a young planet Earth. • Research simulated atmospheric conditions and were given the building blocks of life.

  5. Rain on Titan • Recorded evidence of methane rainstorms on Titan in 2010. • Occurred over equator, rather than at poles. • Replenishes methane lakes and river systems. • Skepticism on whether this is any indication of life.

  6. Methane Lakes • Thanks to Triple Point and rain, Methane Lakes exist on Titan’s surface • Only known terrestrial body other than Earth to have stable liquids on its surface. • Not difficult to land.

  7. Cryovolcano • Winter, S Hemisphere. • SotraFacula is a cryovolcano • Emits water with ammonium, or polyethylene, paraffin waxes, or asphalt. Possibly replenishes methane in atmosphere. • Located at 12degrees S / 39.8 degrees W • 235 km wide

  8. Habitability of Titan • Titan’s PHI is 0.64 • Solid Surface • Evidence of tectonics • Atmosphere • Nitrogen and Hydrocarbons • Believed to be similar to Earth’s atmosphere before oxygen was introduced • Surface Liquid • Titan’s 93K surface temperature is directly above the triple point for methane (90.68K)

  9. Triple Point • The temperature and pressure at which the three phases (gas, liquid, and solid) of that substance coexist in equilibrium. • Different changes in temp and pressure transform substance to ice, liquid, vapor. • EARTH’S SURFACE: temps and pressures similar to the triple pt of WATER. • TITAN’S SURFACE: temps and pressures similar to the triple pt of METHANE. Image Source: http://www.nmij.jp/english/library/units/temperature/triple-chart_en.gif

  10. Possibility for Methanogenic Life • 2005 – Chris McKay suggested that methane-based (rather than water-based) life on Titan could consume hydrogen, acetylene, and ethane – i.e. organisms called methanogens. • EARTH = O2 metabolism Image Source: http://www.engr.ku.edu/images/media/methanotrophs.jpg • C6H12O6 (glucose) + O2 -> CO2 + H2O

  11. Methanogenic Life (continued) • Titan’s organisms would: • Inhale H2 • instead of O2 • React it with acetylene (or CO2) • instead of glucose • Exhale methane • instead of carbon dioxide Water is widespread on Earth, therefore life is widespread on Earth because it uses water. Analogous to Earth = Liquid methane lakes are widespread on the surface of Titan. • TITAN= H2 metabolism C2H2 (acetylene) + 3H2 -> 2CH4 Photo source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/e8/PIA10008_Seas_and_Lakes_on_Titan.jpg/300px-PIA10008_Seas_and_Lakes_on_Titan.jpg

  12. The Miller-Urey Experiment • The Experiment (1953): • INORGANIC components  ORGANIC components in conditions similar to pre-biotic Earth. • Warm water + four gases [H2O, CH4, NH3, and H2] + electrical discharges • Formed simple organic molecules, including amino acids and RNA nucleotides. • Formed the idea that on pre-biotic Earth there existed an abundance of RNA life produced through chemical reactions. • In the search for extraterrestrial life? Helps to understand the conditions required for life to form. • Titan’s atmosphere lacks oxygen, but complex organic molecules are present. •  Could form biological materials in a pre-biotic habitat resembling that of early Earth. Photo source: http://www.chem.duke.edu/~jds/cruise_chem/Exobiology/Pmilurey.gif

  13. Titan as a Prebiotic Environment? • Possible host for microbial extraterrestrial life because of its pre-biotic-like environment rich in complex organic chemistry. • Possibly subsurface liquid ocean serving as a biotic environment. • Implications of a possible ammonia-water ocean inside Titan. Yellow = hazy surface of Titan Light gray = ice layer starting near the surface Blue = internal ocean Light gray = another layer of ice Dark gray = mixture of rock and ice in the interior

  14. Past Mission: Cassini-Huygens • NASA / ESA / ASI Spacecraft to study Saturn and its satellites. • Launched in 1997, reached system in 2004 • Cassini: first to enter Saturn’s orbit. • To study structure and history of the rings and satellite surfaces. • Studies Titan’s cloud, hazes, and regional surfaces.

  15. Huygens Probe • Reached Titan Jan 14th, 2005 • Sent data for 90 minutes after touchdown. • Designed to brake in atmosphere and parachute a robotic lab to the surface. • Sent signals to Cassini to relay back to Earth.

  16. Huygens Design • Heat shield and parachute. • 6 Types of Instrumentation to study: • Physical and electrical props of atmosphere • Radiation balance in Titan’s atmosphere • Chemicals in Titan’s atmosphere • Volatiles and decompose complex organic materials • Physical properties at point of impact.

  17. Huygens Findings • Landed in “Titanian Mud” • Rounded pebbles imply possible fluid motion. • Dense cloud or thick haze ~ 18 – 20 km from surface.

  18. Two New Proposals: TSSM and TiME • Titan Saturn System Mission • Consists of an orbiter and 2 probes. • More features than Huygens. • Titan Mare Explorer • Land in and travel around a methane lake. • To sample and analyze organics for 3 – 6 months. • New power source: Advanced Stirling Radioisotope Generator.

  19. Goals of TSSM & TiME • Explore Titan as a system. • Study Titan’s organic inventory and astrobiological potential • Constrain Titan’s origin and evolution models. • Recover information on Enceladus and Saturn’s magnetosphere.

  20. Mission: PLOT Landing on Titan • Probe for Life and Organics on Titan • Land in Lake Ontario Lacus • Possibly explore nearby cryovolcano • Look for Evidence of Life: CO2, acetylene, amino acids, enzymes, isotopic fingerprints • Use Cassini to relay back data

  21. Advanced Stirling Radioisotope Generator Landing on Titan • Powerful generator currently being developed by NASA. • ≥14 year lifetime • Mass ~ 20 kg • Uses 0.8 kg plutonium-238 • January 2015 Source: NASA

  22. Testing Testing • Mass Spectrometer • Composite Infrared Spectrometer • Test for hotspots in lake • MOD III • Seismometer • Camera Image Source: NASA

  23. Mission Target- Ontario Lacus • Located at 72° S & 183°W • Composed of methane, ethane, and propane. • Volume: 7-50 km3

  24. Ontario Lacus

  25. Tour of Ontario Lacus http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kK4n5l7bHSw

  26. Timeline Timeline 2017: Launch 2024: Land The goal is to land and test during winter in the Southern Hemisphere.

  27. 2017 2024

  28. Cost of Mission Cost of Mission • Proposed Cost: 1 billion • Includes cost of designing and launching a new probe. • Use of the orbiter from the Cassini mission will cut costs • Cassini-Huygens mission (launched 1997) cost NASA 3.2 billion!

  29. The Search for Life Bibliography … is expensive but IMPORTANT!

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