James Webb Space Telescope captures ghostly images of clouds on Saturn’s largest moon Titan

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The James Webb Space Telescope has peered into the atmosphere of Saturn’s largest moon Titan, capturing the first evidence of cloud formation in this moon’s northern hemisphere. Titan is the second largest moon in the solar system, right behind Jupiter’s Ganymede.

A team of scientists pointed the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) at Titan in November of 2022 and July of 2023. With some help from the twin telescopes at the W.M. Keck Observatory on the dormant Mauna Kea volcano in Hawaii, the JWST found evidence of cloud convection, the process through which warmer air rises and brings moisture upward to form clouds. Clouds have been seen in Titan’s southern hemisphere before, but never in the northern hemisphere, where most of the moon’s seas and lakes are found.

Titan has lakes and seas of liquid methane, and the moon features dynamic weather patterns just like our own planet does. That makes it unique among all of the other celestial bodies in our cosmic neighborhood, scientists say. “Titan is the only other place in our solar system that has weather like Earth, in the sense that it has clouds and rainfall onto a surface,” said Conor Nixon of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center and lead author of a new study about Titan’s weather, in a statement.

These new observations of Titan were made during the moon’s summer season. NASA’s Cassini–Huygens spacecraft studied Titan between 2004 and 2017 and observed cloud convection during late summer months in the southern hemisphere, but this new study is the first to watch this phenomenon during summer in Titan’s northern hemisphere.

three images of an orb; one is blue and green and two are red lined with whites and oranges along their edges

Images of Titan were taken by the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope on July 11, 2023 (top row) and the ground-based W.M. Keck Observatories on July, 14 2023 (bottom row). They show methane clouds (denoted by the white arrows) appearing at different altitudes in Titan’s northern hemisphere. (Image credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Keck Observatory)

Scientists say the new data could help solve some of the outstanding mysteries about Titan. “Together with ground-based observations, Webb is giving us precious new insights into Titan’s atmosphere, that we hope to be able to investigate much closer-up in the future with a possible ESA mission to visit the Saturn system,” said the European Space Agency’s Thomas Cornet, a co-author of the new study.

a mottled green orb on a black background

A composite image of Titan as seen by NASA’s Cassini spacecraft. (Image credit: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona)

In addition to watching clouds form in the moon’s northern hemisphere, the data gathered by the JWST’s observations of Titan also helped identify a “key missing piece” of the moon’s chemistry: a new organic molecule known as a methyl radical that has a “free,” or unbonded, electron.

Because the lakes and seas on Titan are filled with methane, this compound is a key component of many of the moon’s chemical processes. Sunlight and electrons from nearby Saturn split methane molecules in Titan’s atmosphere, where they then combine with other molecules to make more complex substances.

Scientists are thrilled about this discovery of methyl radical in Titan’s atmosphere, as it offers a window into these active chemical processes as they occur.

“For the first time we can see the chemical cake while it’s rising in the oven, instead of just the starting ingredients of flour and sugar, and then the final, iced cake,” said astrochemist and study co-author Stefanie Milam of the Goddard Space Flight Center, in a NASA statement.

four panels showing orbs connected by bars splitting and merging together again in a blue atmospheric layer above an orange and yellow moon

This four-panel infographic demonstrates a key chemical process believed to occur in the atmosphere of Saturn’s moon Titan. 1. Titan has a thick, nitrogen (N2) atmosphere that also contains methane (CH4).2. Molecules known as methyl radicals (CH3) form when methane is broken apart by sunlight or energetic electrons from Saturn’s magnetosphere.3. It then recombines with other molecules or with itself to make substances like ethane (C2H6).4. Methane, ethane, and other molecules condense and rain out of the atmosphere, forming lakes and seas on Titan’s surface. NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope detected the methyl radical on Titan for the first time, providing a key missing piece for our understanding of Titan’s chemical processes. (Image credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, and Elizabeth Wheatley (STScI))

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But the story won’t end here, as scientists still want to know more about Titan and its chemistry. While the Cassini-Huygens mission revealed a great deal about the moon, nothing can surpass actually sending a spacecraft onto the moon itself to perform in-situ, or on-location, science.

To accomplish this, NASA is planning the ambitious Dragonfly mission, which will send a nuclear-powered octocopter onto the surface of Titan, where it will spend three years “hopping” from location to location and studying the moon’s chemistry. Dragonfly is scheduled to launch atop a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket in 2028, and reach the Titan in 2034, if all goes according to plan.

a long, silver chrome drone with six body-level propellers resembles a dragonfly. it flies over a pink/tan sandy dune landscape.

An artist’s depiction of NASA’s Dragonfly mission on the surface of Saturn’s moon Titan. (Image credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL/Steve Gribben)

Dragonfly recently passed its Critical Design Review test, meaning it can now move on to being manufactured. The explorer will study Titan’s potential habitability, seeking out signs of prebiotic chemistry as well as keeping a robotic eye out for any signs of life.

A study of the summer atmosphere of Titan’s northern hemisphere has been published in the journal Nature Astronomy.

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