Ice volcano may solve mysteries about Titan
The possible discovery of an ice volcano on Saturn’s moon Titan may solve one of the lingering mysteries about the strange satellite with the smog-choked atmosphere.
Scientists have wondered for decades where the methane in Titan’s atmosphere came from. Titan, Saturn’s largest moon, is the only moon in the solar system with a substantial atmosphere. Most of that atmosphere is made up of nitrogen, with up to 3 percent of it composed of methane.
Investigators theorized that it could have come from a methane-rich hydrocarbon ocean that covered much of the moon. But instruments aboard the Cassini spacecraft, which has been investigating the moon since late last year, have failed to turn up evidence of such a sea.
A recent fly-by of Titan has now produced an image of a circular feature about 19 miles in diameter with two wings extending to the west, scientists reported today in the journal Nature.
Scientists believe the wings represent repeated flows from a volcano that spews ice and liquid methane, instead of molten rock. Researchers have noted the presence of similar physical features surrounding volcanoes on Earth and Venus.
This raises the possibility that the atmospheric methane comes from a subsurface source of liquid methane that is vented to the atmosphere by erupting volcanoes.
The eruptions are possibly caused by heat generated by tidal movements of the liquid methane inside Titan. The moon is thought to be subject to extreme variations of its internal tides because it has a strongly elliptical orbit that sometimes draws it close to Saturn and other times sends it spinning farther out in space.
“We all thought volcanoes had to exist on Titan, and now we’ve found the most convincing evidence to date,” said Bonnie Buratti, a member of the team at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory analyzing results of Cassini’s infrared mapping spectrometer. “This is exactly what we’ve been looking for.”






