Author
Listed:
- Jason D. Hofgartner
(California Institute of Technology)
- Alexander G. Hayes
(Cornell University)
- Donald B. Campbell
(Cornell University)
- Jonathan I. Lunine
(Cornell University)
- Gregory J. Black
(University of Virginia)
- Shannon M. MacKenzie
(Johns Hopkins University)
- Samuel P. D. Birch
(Cornell University)
- Charles Elachi
(California Institute of Technology)
- Randolph D. Kirk
(United States Geological Survey)
- Alice Le Gall
(UPMC Univ. Paris 06, CNRS
Institut Universitaire de France)
- Ralph D. Lorenz
(Johns Hopkins University)
- Stephen D. Wall
(California Institute of Technology)
Abstract
Saturn’s moon Titan has a methane cycle with clouds, rain, rivers, lakes, and seas; it is the only world known to presently have a volatile cycle akin to Earth’s tropospheric water cycle. Anomalously specular radar reflections (ASRR) from Titan’s tropical region were observed with the Arecibo Observatory (AO) and Green Bank Telescope (GBT) and interpreted as evidence for liquid surfaces. The Cassini spacecraft discovered lakes/seas on Titan, however, it did not observe lakes/seas at the AO/GBT anomalously specular locations. A satisfactory explanation for the ASRR has been elusive for more than a decade. Here we show that the ASRR originate from one terrain unit, likely paleolakes/paleoseas. Titan observations provide ground-truth in the search for oceans on exoearths and an important lesson is that identifying liquid surfaces by specular reflections requires a stringent definition of specular; we propose a definition for this purpose.
Suggested Citation
Jason D. Hofgartner & Alexander G. Hayes & Donald B. Campbell & Jonathan I. Lunine & Gregory J. Black & Shannon M. MacKenzie & Samuel P. D. Birch & Charles Elachi & Randolph D. Kirk & Alice Le Gall & , 2020.
"The root of anomalously specular reflections from solid surfaces on Saturn’s moon Titan,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 11(1), pages 1-8, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:11:y:2020:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-020-16663-1
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-16663-1
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