ESAESA ScienceCassini-Huygens
   
Unique insights into a ringed world
About Cassini-Huygens
About Saturn
About Titan
Meet the team
Multimedia
VideoTalkCassini-Huygens imagesCassini-Huygens videosTitan virtual tourHygens probe descent - multilingual CD-romDownload wallpapersDownload screensavers3D Flash 'model'SOI animationWaiting for Titan - the human side of Huygens
Watch the event
Services
Comments Bookmark and Share
 
 
 
 
News
 
printer friendly page
Larger and larger lakes on Titan
Larger and larger lakes on Titan
Larger and larger lakes, islands and dunes on Titan
 
27 February 2007
During a near-polar flyby on 22 February 2007, Cassini's radar instrument took beautiful images of Titan's surface features – a big island smack in the middle of one of the larger lakes imaged on this moon so far, and dunes.
 
The island visible in the first radar image is about 90 by 150 kilometres across, about the size of the Big Island of Hawaii. It may actually be a peninsula connected by a bridge to a larger stretch of land. As you go farther down the image, several very small lakes begin to appear, which may be controlled by local topography.

The view is centred at about 79°N latitude and 310°W longitude (north is toward the left of this image), offering further evidence that the largest lakes are at the highest latitudes.  
 
Interaction bewteen dunes and bright features on Titan
Interaction bewteen dunes and bright features on Titan
The second radar image shown in this article, also obtained by Cassini's radar on 22 February 2007, shows dunes surrounding a bright feature on Saturn's moon Titan.

Dunes have been previously seen on Titan, so far concentrated near the equator. They are thought to be composed of small hydrocarbon or water ice particles - probably about 250 microns in diameter, similar to sand grains on Earth. These are formed into dunes by the prevailing west-to-east surface winds. Because of the shape and length of the dunes, they are probably 'longitudinal' (lying in the same direction as the average wind) rather than transverse dunes, which form across the wind and are more common on Earth.

There are several kinds of interaction between the dunes and the brighter features in this image. At the left, the dunes seem to be covering the bright material, while at the centre and right, they seem to be terminated against it. At the lower centre and lower right, they flow around it. These various interactions will help scientists to determine the nature of both of these features.

The image is centred at about 3.5°S latitude and 37.3°W longitude (north is toward the left of the image).
 
 
Note for editors
 
The Cassini-Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, the European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency. The radar instrument was built by JPL and the Italian Space Agency, working with team members from the United States and several European countries.
 
 
For more information
 
Jean-Pierre Lebreton, ESA Huygens Project Scientist
Email : jean-pierre.lebreton @ esa.int
 
 

 


At Saturn and TitanViews on approach to Saturn
More about...
More on Cassini-Huygens spacecraft
Related articles
Cassini images mammoth cloud engulfing Titan’s North PoleThe jet stream of TitanHuygens’s second landing anniversary – the surprises continueTitan has liquid lakes!Tallest mountains ever seen on Titan imaged by CassiniVast polar ethane cloud observed on Titan’s north poleHuygens Scientific Archive data set releasedHow the world watched HuygensTitan's pebbles 'seen' by Huygens radioCassini's radar spots 'Great Lakes' on TitanLanding on Titan – the new moviesMovie of Titan's surface in the infraredA simulated view from Huygens
Related links
ESA Planetary Science archive (PSA)Cassini-Huygens at JPLCassini-Huygens at NASAItalian Space Agency (ASI)
 
 
 
   Copyright 2000 - 2010 © European Space Agency. All rights reserved.