An ice cloud taking shape over Titan’s south pole is the latest sign that the
change of seasons is setting off a cascade of radical changes in the atmosphere
of Saturn's largest moon. Made from an unknown ice, this type of cloud has long
hung over Titan's north pole, where it is now fading, according to observations
made by the Composite Infrared Spectrometer (CIRS) on NASA’s Cassini
spacecraft.
"We associate this particular kind of ice cloud with winter
weather on Titan, and this is the first time we have detected it anywhere but
the north pole," said the study's lead author, Donald E. Jennings, a CIRS
Co-Investigator at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt,
Md.
The southern ice cloud, which shows up in the far infrared part of
the light spectrum, is evidence that an important pattern of global air
circulation on Titan has reversed direction. When Cassini first observed the
circulation pattern, warm air from the southern hemisphere was rising high in
the atmosphere and got transported to the cold north pole. There, the air cooled
and sank down to lower layers of the atmosphere, where it formed ice clouds. A
similar pattern, called a Hadley cell, carries warm, moist air from Earth's
tropics to the cooler middle latitudes.
Based on modeling, scientists had
long predicted a reversal of this circulation once Titan's north pole began to
warm and its south pole began to cool. The official transition from winter to
spring at Titan's north pole occurred in August 2009. But because each of the
moon's seasons lasts about 7-1/2 Earth years, researchers still didn't know
exactly when this reversal would happen or how long it would take.
The
first signs of the reversal came in data acquired in early 2012, which was
shortly after the start of southern fall on Titan, when Cassini images and
visual and infrared mapping spectrometer data revealed the presence of a
high-altitude "haze hood" and a swirling polar vortex at the south pole. Both
features have long been associated with the cold north pole. Later, Cassini
scientists reported that infrared observations of Titan's winds and temperatures
made by CIRS had provided definitive evidence of air sinking, rather than
upwelling, at the south pole. By looking back through the data, the team
narrowed down the change in circulation to within six months of the 2009
equinox.
Despite the new activity at the south pole, the southern ice
cloud hadn't appeared yet. CIRS didn't detect it until about July 2012, a few
months after the haze and vortex were spotted in the south, according to the
study published in Astrophysical Journal Letters in December 2012.
"This
lag makes sense, because first the new circulation pattern has to bring loads
and loads of gases to the south pole. Then the air has to sink. The ices have to
condense. And the pole has to be under enough shadow to protect the vapors that
condense to form those ices," said Carrie Anderson, a CIRS team member and
Cassini participating scientist at NASA Goddard.
At first blush, the
southern ice cloud seems to be building rapidly. The northern ice cloud, on the
other hand, was present when Cassini first arrived and has been slowly fading
the entire time the spacecraft has been observing it.
So far, the
identity of the ice in these clouds has eluded scientists, though they have
ruled out simple chemicals, such as methane, ethane and hydrogen cyanide, that
are typically associated with Titan. One possibility is that species X, as some
team members call the ice, could be a mixture of organic
compounds.
"What's happening at Titan's poles has some analogy to Earth
and to our ozone holes," said the CIRS Principal Investigator, NASA Goddard's F.
Michael Flasar. "And on Earth, the ices in the high polar clouds aren't just
window dressing: They play a role in releasing the chlorine that destroys ozone.
How this affects Titan chemistry is still unknown. So it's important to learn as
much as we can about this phenomenon, wherever we find it."
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