In 2004, the Cassini-Huygens spacecraft -- a probe that flies by
Titan as it orbits Saturn -- penetrated Titan's haze, providing
scientists with their first detailed images of the surface. Radar images
revealed an icy terrain carved out over millions of years by rivers of
liquid methane, similar to how rivers of water have etched into Earth's
rocky continents.
While images of Titan have revealed its present landscape, very
little is known about its geologic past. Now researchers at MIT and the
University of Tennessee at Knoxville have analyzed images of Titan's
river networks and determined that in some regions, rivers have created
surprisingly little erosion. The researchers say there are two possible
explanations: either erosion on Titan is extremely slow, or some other
recent phenomena may have wiped out older riverbeds and landforms.
"It's a surface that should have eroded much more than what we're
seeing, if the river networks have been active for a long time," says
Taylor Perron, the Cecil and Ida Green Assistant Professor of Geology at
MIT. "It raises some very interesting questions about what has been
happening on Titan in the last billion years."
A paper detailing the group's findings will appear in the Journal of Geophysical Research-Planets.
What accounts for a low crater count?
Compared to most moons in our solar system, Titan is relatively
smooth, with few craters pockmarking its facade. Titan is around four
billion years old, about the same age as the rest of the solar system.
But judging by the number of craters, one might estimate that its
surface is much younger, between 100 million and one billion years old.
What might explain this moon's low crater count? Perron says the answer may be similar to what happens on Earth.
"We don't have many impact craters on Earth," Perron says. "People
flock to them because they're so few, and one explanation is that
Earth's continents are always eroding or being covered with sediment.
That may be the case on Titan, too."
For example, plate tectonics, erupting volcanoes, advancing glaciers
and river networks have all reshaped Earth's surface over billions of
years. On Titan, similar processes -- tectonic upheaval, icy lava
eruptions, erosion and sedimentation by rivers -- may be at work.
But identifying which of these geological phenomena may have modified
Titan's surface is a significant challenge. Images generated by the
Cassini spacecraft, similar to aerial photos but with much coarser
resolution, are flat, depicting terrain from a bird's-eye perspective,
with no information about a landform's elevation or depth.
"It's an interesting challenge," Perron says. "It's almost like we
were thrown back a few centuries, before there were many topographic
maps, and we only had maps showing where the rivers are."
Charting a river's evolution
Perron and MIT graduate student Benjamin Black set out to determine
the extent to which river networks may have renewed Titan's surface. The
team analyzed images taken from Cassini-Huygens, and mapped 52
prominent river networks from four regions on Titan. The researchers
compared the images with a model of river network evolution developed by
Perron. This model depicts the evolution of a river over time, given
variables such as the strength of the underlying material and the rate
of flow through the river channels. As a river erodes slowly through the
ice, it transforms from a long, spindly thread into a dense, treelike
network of tributaries.
Black compared his measurements of Titan's river networks with the
model, and found the moon's rivers most resembled the early stages of a
typical terrestrial river's evolution. The observations indicate that
rivers in some regions have caused very little erosion, and hence very
little modification of Titan's surface.
"They're more on the long and spindly side," Black says. "You do see
some full and branching networks, and that's tantalizing, because if we
get more data, it will be interesting to know whether there really are
regional differences."
Going a step further, Black compared Titan's images with recently
renewed landscapes on Earth, including volcanic terrain on the island of
Kauai and recently glaciated landscapes in North America. The river
networks in those locations are similar in form to those on Titan,
suggesting that geologic processes may have reshaped the moon's icy
surface in the recent past.
"It's a weirdly Earth-like place, even with this exotic combination
of materials and temperatures," Perron says. "And so you can still say
something definitive about the erosion. It's the same physics."
This research was supported by NASA's Cassini Data Analysis Program.
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