• → European Space Agency

      • Space for Europe
      • Space News
      • Space in Images
      • Space in Videos
    • About Us

      • Welcome to ESA
      • DG's News and Views
      • For Member State Delegations
      • Business with ESA
      • ESA Exhibitions
      • ESA Publications
      • Careers at ESA
    • Our Activities

      • Space News
      • Observing the Earth
      • Human Spaceflight
      • Launchers
      • Navigation
      • Space Science
      • Space Engineering
      • Operations
      • Technology
      • Telecommunications & Integrated Applications
    • For Public

    • For Media

      • Media
      • ESA TV
      • Videos for professionals
      • Photos
    • For Educators

    • For Kids

    • ESA

    • ESA Science

    • Cassini-Huygens

    • Unique insights into a ringed world

      • Striking sights of a ringed world...
      • Solving the puzzles of Saturn and Titan
    • About Cassini-Huygens

      • Cassini-Huygens mission facts
      • The mission
      • Cassini spacecraft
      • Cassini instruments
      • Huygens spacecraft
      • Huygens instruments
      • The launcher
    • About Saturn

      • Facts about Saturn
      • Saturn's rings
      • Saturn's moons
      • Saturn's atmosphere
      • Saturn's magnetosphere
    • About Titan

      • Facts about Titan
      • Titan's atmosphere
      • Titan's surface
      • Life on Titan?
    • Meet the team

      • International collaboration
      • Huygens Mission Team
      • Cassini Project Team
      • ASI Programme Manager
      • Huygens investigators
      • Cassini orbiter investigators (1)
      • Cassini orbiter investigators (2)
    • Multimedia
    • VideoTalk
    • Cassini-Huygens images
    • Cassini-Huygens videos
    • Titan virtual tour
    • Hygens probe descent - multilingual CD-rom
    • Download wallpapers
    • Download screensavers
    • 3D Flash 'model'
    • SOI animation
    • Waiting for Titan - the human side of Huygens
    • Services
    • Comments

    ESA > Our Activities > Space Science > Cassini-Huygens

    Tide out on Titan? A soft solid surface for Huygens

    Huygens descent and landing overview
    30 November 2005

    The Surface Science Package (SSP) revealed that Huygens could have hit and cracked an ice ‘pebble’ on landing, and then it slumped into a sandy surface possibly dampened by liquid methane. Had the tide on Titan just gone out?

    The SSP comprised nine independent sensors, chosen to cover the wide range of properties that be encountered, from liquids or very soft material to solid, hard ice. Some were designed primarily for landing on a solid surface and others for a liquid landing, with eight also operating during the descent.

    Extreme and unexpected motion of Huygens at high altitudes was recorded by the SSP’s two-axis tilt sensor tilt sensor, suggesting strong turbulence whose meteorological origin remains unknown.

    Penetrometry and accelerometry measurements on impact revealed that the surface was neither hard (like solid ice) nor very compressible (like a blanket of fluffy aerosol). Huygens landed on a relatively soft surface resembling wet clay, lightly packed snow and either wet or dry sand.

    The probe had penetrated about 10 cm into surface, and settling gradually by a few millimetres after landing and tilting by a fraction of a degree. An initial high penetration force is best explained by the probe striking one of the many pebbles seen in the DISR images after landing.

    Acoustic sounding with SSP over the last 90 m above the surface revealed a relatively smooth, but not completely flat, surface surrounding the landing site. The probe’s vertical velocity just before landing was determined with high precision as 4.6 m/s and the touchdown location had an undulating topography of around 1 metre over an area of 1000 sq. metres.

    Those sensors intended to measure liquid properties (refractometer, permittivity and density sensors) would have performed correctly had the probe landed in liquid. The results from these sensors are still being analysed for indications of trace liquids, since the Huygens GCMS detected evaporating methane after touchdown.

    Together with optical, radar and infrared spectrometer images from Cassini and images from the DISR instrument on Huygens, these results indicate a variety of possible processes modifying Titan’s surface.

    Fluvial and marine processes appear most prominent at the Huygens landing site, although aeolian (wind-borne) activity cannot be ruled out. The SSP and HASI impact data are consistent with two plausible interpretations for the soft material: solid, granular material having a very small or zero cohesion, or a surface containing liquid.

    In the latter case, the surface might be analogous to a wet sand or a textured tar/wet clay. The ‘sand’ could be made of ice grains from impact or fluvial erosion, wetted by liquid methane. Alternatively it might be a collection of photochemical products and fine-grained ice, making a somewhat sticky ‘tar’.

    The uncertainties reflect the exotic nature of the materials comprising the solid surface and possible liquids in this extremely cold (–180 °C) environment.


    Notes to editors:

    This summary is based on a paper which appears on line in Nature, on 30 November 2005.

    For more information:

    John Zarnecki, PI Surface Science Package
    Open University, Milton Keynes, UK
    E-mail: J.C.Zarnecki @ open.ac.uk

    Jean-Pierre Lebreton, ESA Huygens Mission Manager
    E-mail: jplebret @ rssd.esa.int

    Rate this

    Views

    Share

    • Currently 0 out of 5 Stars.
    • 1
    • 2
    • 3
    • 4
    • 5
    Rating: 0/5 (0 votes cast)

    Thank you for rating!

    You have already rated this page, you can only rate it once!

    Your rating has been changed, thanks for rating!

    36
    Tweet
    • At Saturn and Titan
    • Looking at Mars
    • Related articles
      • Predicting the weather on Titan?
        • Highlights of ESA’s Huygens mission
          • Titan’s turbulence surprises scientists
            • Rain, winds and haze during the descent to Titan
              • Tide out on Titan? A soft solid surface for Huygens
                • First 'in situ' composition measurements made in Titan's atmosphere
                  • Huygens 3D animation of Titan's surface
                  • Huygens landing site animation
                  • Related links
                    • Mars Express instruments
                      • Huygens instruments
                        • Cassini instruments

    Connect with us

    • RSS
    • Youtube
    • Twitter
    • Flickr
    • G+
    • Facebook
    • Livestream
    • Subscribe
    • App Store
    • LATEST ARTICLES
    • · Rare merger reveals secrets of gal…
    • · Watching for hazards: ESA opens as…
    • · ESA astronaut Timothy Peake set fo…
    • · Space drives e-mobility
    • · Proba-V opens its eyes
    • FAQ

    • Jobs at ESA

    • Site Map

    • Contacts

    • Terms and conditions