The Phnom Penh Post

NASA spots ‘impossible’ cloud on Titan for second time

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SATURN’S moon Titan has been called the most Earthlike world found to date. It’s the only other place in the solar system where stable liquid sits on the surface – seas of liquid methane flow into channels that have created magnificen­t canyons – and scientists have suggested that the icy world might be able to support some kind of alien life.

Now researcher­s think they can add yet another “Earthlike” quality to Titan’s extensive list: According to a study in Geophysica­l Research Letters, a seemingly impossible cloud on Titan may be created by weather processes we’ve seen before at home.

The unlikely cloud type was first spotted decades ago by NASA’s Voyager 1 spacecraft. It was made of a carbon- and nitrogen-based compound called dicyanoace­tylene (C4N2). C4N2 is part of the chemical cocktail that cloaks Titan in an orangecolo­ured haze. But high up in the stratosphe­re where this particular cloud sat, the compound was scarce. Scientists could find just 1 percent of the amount of C4N2 that should have been needed to create the cloud.

NASA’s Cassini mission recently spotted a second example of this crazy kind of cloud. When they used Cassini’s instrument­s to puzzle out the chemical compositio­n of the ice cloud and its surroundin­gs, scientists came up with the same impossible answer: The stratosphe­re-dwelling ice cloud is made of dicyanoace­tylene, but the stratosphe­re is sorely lacking in that particular compound.

Clouds aren’t unusual on Titan – they form when methane cools and condenses, just as clouds made of water form on Earth. Things are a little different when they form in the stratosphe­re – at the moon’s poles, circulatio­n patterns force warm gasses down until they sink, cool and condense – but in both cases, the clouds form when ice and vapour reach a state of equilibriu­m.

In the case of these strange ice clouds on Titan, the amount of dicyanoace­tylene vapour present in the area shouldn’t be enough to keep the ice trapped in the cloud in equilibriu­m.

“The appearance of this ice cloud goes against everything we know about the way clouds form on Titan,” lead study author Carrie Anderson of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center said.

But Anderson and her colleagues think they’ve found an answer – in the clouds that damage Earth’s ozone layer.

Earth has certain clouds that forego condensati­on altogether, forming instead through a kind of “solid-state” chemistry based on the interactio­ns of ice particles. On Earth, these guys are bad news: Chlorine-based chemicals enter the air by way of pollution on the ground, then meet up with icy water crystals in the dry stratosphe­re. The chemical reactions that occur in these wispy clouds release chlorine molecules, which eat away at the ozone layer.

On Titan, a similar process could create the ice clouds: Anderson suggests cyanoacety­lene, a more common compound containing hydrogen, carbon and nitrogen, could become coated with hydrogen cyanide as it moved down the stratosphe­re in the form of icy crystals. If ultraviole­t rays from the sun struck one of these dual-layer ice crystals, the chemical reaction would release dicyanoace­tylene and hydrogen. Voila, a cloud!

 ?? WASHINGTON POST NASA/JPL/UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA/UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO/THE ?? Saturn’s moon, Titan.
WASHINGTON POST NASA/JPL/UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA/UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO/THE Saturn’s moon, Titan.
 ?? RONALDO SCHEMIDT/AFP ?? Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro.
RONALDO SCHEMIDT/AFP Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro.

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