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http://www.eso.org/outreach/press-re...hot-04-05.html
ESO Press Photo 04/05 24 February 2005 For immediate release Another Look at an Enigmatic New World VLT NACO Performs Outstanding Observations of Titan's Atmosphere and Surface On January 14, 2005, the ESA Huygens probe arrived at Saturn's largest satellite, Titan. After a faultless descent through the dense atmosphere, it touched down on the icy surface of this strange world from where it continued to transmit precious data back to the Earth. Several of the world's large ground-based telescopes were also active during this exciting event, observing Titan before and near the Huygens encounter, within the framework of a dedicated campaign coordinated by the members of the Huygens Project Scientist Team. Indeed, large astronomical telescopes with state-of-the art adaptive optics systems allow scientists to image Titan's disc in quite some detail. Moreover, ground-based observations are not restricted to the limited period of the fly-by of Cassini and landing of Huygens. They hence complement ideally the data gathered by this NASA/ESA mission, further optimising the overall scientific return. A group of astronomers [1] observed Titan with ESO's Very Large Telescope (VLT) at the Paranal Observatory (Chile) during the nights from 14 to 16 January, by means of the adaptive optics NAOS/CONICA instrument mounted on the 8.2-m Yepun telescope [2]. The observations were carried out in several modes, resulting in a series of fine images and detailed spectra of this mysterious moon. They complement earlier VLT observations of Titan, cf. ESO Press Photos 08/04 and ESO Press Release 09/04. The highest contrast images ESO PR Photo 04a/05 images/phot-04a-05-preview.jpg ESO PR Photo 04a/05 Titan's surface (NACO/VLT) [Preview - JPEG: 400 x 712 pix - 64k] images/phot-04a-05-preview.jpg [Normal - JPEG: 800 x 1424 pix - 524k] images/phot-04a-05-normal.jpg ESO PR Photo 04b/05 images/phot-04b-05-preview.jpg ESO PR Photo 04b/05 Map of Titan's Surface (NACO/VLT) [Preview - JPEG: 400 x 651 pix - 41k] images/phot-04b-05-preview.jpg [Normal - JPEG: 800 x 1301 pix - 432k] images/phot-04b-05-normal.jpg Caption: ESO PR Photo 04a/05 shows Titan's trailing hemisphere [3]. with the Huygens landing site marked as an "X". The left image was taken with NACO and a narrow-band filter centred at 2 microns. On the right is the NACO/SDI image of the same location showing Titan's surface through the 1.6 micron methane window. A spherical projection with coordinates on Titan is overplotted. ESO PR Photo 04b/05 is a map of Titan taken with NACO at 1.28 micron (a methane window allowing it to probe down to the surface). On the leading side of Titan, the bright equatorial feature ("Xanadu") is dominating. On the trailing side, the landing site of the Huygens probe is indicated. ESO PR Photo 04c/05 images/phot-04c-05-preview.jpg ESO PR Photo 04c/05 Titan, the Enigmatic Moon, and Huygens Landing Site (NACO-SDI/VLT and Cassini/ISS) [Preview - JPEG: 400 x 589 pix - 40k] images/phot-04c-05-preview.jpg [Normal - JPEG: 800 x 1178 pix - 290k] images/phot-04c-05-normal.jpg Caption: ESO PR Photo 04c/05 is a comparison between the NACO/SDI image and an image taken by Cassini/ISS while approaching Titan. The Cassini image shows the Huygens landing site map wrapped around Titan, rotated to the same position as the January NACO SDI observations. The yellow "X" marks the landing site of the ESA Huygens probe. The Cassini/ISS image is courtesy of NASA, JPL, Space Science Institute (see http://sci.esa.int/science-e/www/obj...objectid=36222). The coloured lines delineate the regions that were imaged by Cassini at differing resolutions. The lower-resolution imaging sequences are outlined in blue. Other areas have been specifically targeted for moderate and high resolution mosaicking of surface features. These include the site where the European Space Agency's Huygens probe has touched down in mid-January (marked with the yellow X), part of the bright region named Xanadu (easternmost extent of the area covered), and a boundary between dark and bright regions. ESO PR Photo 04d/05 images/phot-04d-05-preview.jpg ESO PR Photo 04d/05 Evolution of the Atmosphere of Titan (NACO/VLT) [Preview - JPEG: 400 x 902 pix - 40k] images/phot-04d-05-preview.jpg [Normal - JPEG: 800 x 1804 pix - 320k] images/phot-04d-05-normal.jpg Caption: ESO PR Photo 04d/05 is an image of Titan's atmosphere at 2.12 microns as observed with NACO on the VLT at three different epochs from 2002 till now. Titan's atmosphere exhibits seasonal and meteorological changes which can clearly be seen here : the North-South asymmetry - indicative of changes in the chemical composition in one pole or the other, depending on the season - is now clearly in favour of the North pole. Indeed, the situation has reversed with respect to a few years ago when the South pole was brighter. Also visible in these images is a bright feature in the South pole, found to be presently dimming after having appeared very bright from 2000 to 2003. The differences in size are due to the variation in the distance to Earth of Saturn and its planetary system. The new images show Titan's atmosphere and surface at various near-infrared spectral bands. The surface of Titan's trailing side is visible in images taken through narrow-band filters at wavelengths 1.28, 1.6 and 2.0 microns. They correspond to the so-called "methane windows" which allow to peer all the way through the lower Titan atmosphere to the surface. On the other hand, Titan's atmosphere is visible through filters centred in the wings of these methane bands, e.g. at 2.12 and 2.17 microns. Eric Gendron of the Paris Observatory in France and leader of the team, is extremely pleased: "We believe that some of these images are the highest-contrast images of Titan ever taken with any ground-based or earth-orbiting telescope." The excellent images of Titan's surface show the location of the Huygens landing site in much detail. In particular, those centred at wavelength 1.6 micron and obtained with the Simultaneous Differential Imager (SDI) on NACO [4] provide the highest contrast and best views. This is firstly because the filters match the 1.6 micron methane window most accurately. Secondly, it is possible to get an even clearer view of the surface by subtracting accurately the simultaneously recorded images of the atmospheric haze, taken at wavelength 1.625 micron. The images show the great complexity of Titan's trailing side, which was earlier thought to be very dark. However, it is now obvious that bright and dark regions cover the field of these images. The best resolution achieved on the surface features is about 0.039 arcsec, corresponding to 200 km on Titan. ESO PR Photo 04c/04 illustrates the striking agreement between the NACO/SDI image taken with the VLT from the ground and the ISS/Cassini map. The images of Titan's atmosphere at 2.12 microns show a still-bright south pole with an additional atmospheric bright feature, which may be clouds or some other meteorological phenomena. The astronomers have followed it since 2002 with NACO and notice that it seems to be fading with time. At 2.17 microns, this feature is not visible and the north-south asymmetry - also known as "Titan's smile" - is clearly in favour in the north. The two filters probe different altitude levels and the images thus provide information about the extent and evolution of the north-south asymmetry. Probing the composition of the surface ESO PR Photo 04e/05 images/phot-04e-05-preview.jpg ESO PR Photo 04e/05 Spectrum of Two Regions on Titan (NACO/VLT) [Preview - JPEG: 400 x 623 pix - 44k] images/phot-04e-05-preview.jpg [Normal - JPEG: 800 x 1246 pix - 283k] images/phot-04e-05-normal.jpg Caption: ESO PR Photo 04e/05 represents two of the many spectra obtained on January 16, 2005 with NACO and covering the 2.02 to 2.53 micron range. The blue spectrum corresponds to the brightest region on Titan's surface within the slit, while the red spectrum corresponds to the dark area around the Huygens landing site. In the methane band, the two spectra are equal, indicating a similar atmospheric content; in the methane window centred at 2.0 microns, the spectra show differences in brightness, but are in phase. This suggests that there is no real variation in the composition beyond different atmospheric mixings. ESO PR Photo 04f/05 images/phot-04f-05-preview.jpg ESO PR Photo 04f/05 Imaging Titan with a Tunable Filter (NACO Fabry-Perot/VLT) [Preview - JPEG: 400 x 718 pix - 44k] images/phot-04f-05-preview.jpg [Normal - JPEG: 800 x 1435 pix - 326k] images/phot-04f-05-normal.jpg Caption: ESO PR Photo 04f/05 presents a series of images of Titan taken around the 2.0 micron methane window probing different layers of the atmosphere and the surface. The images are currently under thorough processing and analysis so as to reveal any subtle variations in wavelength that could be indicative of the spectral response of the various surface components, thus allowing the astronomers to identify them. Because the astronomers have also obtained spectroscopic data at different wavelengths, they will be able to recover useful information on the surface composition. The Cassini/VIMS instrument explores Titan's surface in the infrared range and, being so close to this moon, it obtains spectra with a much better spatial resolution than what is possible with Earth-based telescopes. However, with NACO at the VLT, the astronomers have the advantage of observing Titan with considerably higher spectral resolution, and thus to gain more detailed spectral information about the composition, etc. The observations therefore complement each other. Once the composition of the surface at the location of the Huygens landing is known from the detailed analysis of the in-situ measurements, it should become possible to learn the nature of the surface features elsewhere on Titan by combining the Huygens results with more extended cartography from Cassini as well as from VLT observations to come. More information Results on Titan obtained with data from NACO/VLT are in press in the journal Icarus ("Maps of Titan's surface from 1 to 2.5 micron" by A. Coustenis et al.). Previous images of Titan obtained with NACO and with NACO/SDI are accessible as ESO PR Photos 08/04 and ESO PR Photos 11/04. See also these Press Releases for additional scientific references. Notes [1]: The team is composed of Eric Gendron, Athena Coustenis, Mathieu Hirtzig, Michel Combes, Pierre Drossart, and Alberto Negrao (LESIA, Paris-Meudon Observatory, France), Pascal Rannou (Univ. de Versailles, France), Markus Hartung (ESO), Tom Herbst (Max-Planck Institute for Astronomy, Heidelberg, Germany), Tobias Owen (IfA, Hawaii), Laird Close (University of Arizona, USA), Olivier Witasse and Jean-Pierre Lebreton (ESA/ESTEC). [2]: Adaptive Optics (AO) systems work by means of a computer-controlled deformable mirror that counteracts the image distortion induced by atmospheric turbulence. Adaptive Optics is based on real-time optical corrections computed from image data obtained by a special camera at very high speed, many hundreds of times each second (see e.g. ESO Press Release 25/01 ../pr-2001/pr-25-01.html , ESO PR Photos 04a-c/02 ../pr-2002/phot-04-02.html, ESO PR Photos 19a-c/02 ../pr-2002/phot-19-02.html, ESO PR Photos 21a-c/02 ../pr-2002/phot-21-02.html, ESO Press Release 17/02 ../pr-2002/pr-17-02.html, and ESO Press Release 26/03 ../pr-2003/pr-26-03.html for earlier NACO images, and ESO Press Release 11/03 ../pr-2003/pr-11-03.html for MACAO-VLTI results). [3]: Titan is tidally-locked to Saturn, and hence always presents the same face towards the planet. To image all sides of Titan (from the Earth) therefore requires observations during almost one entire orbital period, 16 days. The trailing hemisphere is the one we see when Titan moves away from us in its course around Saturn. The leading hemisphere is the one on the other side. [4]: The Simultaneous Differential Imager is a novel optical device that provides four simultaneous high-resolution images at three wavelengths around a near-infrared atmospheric methane absorption feature. The main application of the SDI is high-contrast imaging for the search for substellar companions with methane in their atmosphere, e.g. brown dwarfs and giant exoplanets, near other stars. However, as the present photos demonstrate, it is also superbly suited for Titan imaging. (see ESO PR 09/04 ../pr-2004/pr-09-04.html and PR 02/05 pr-02-05.html for more details). Contacts Eric Gendron LESIA (Bat. 18) Observatoire de Paris 92195 Meudon Cedex, France Tel: 331 45 07 79 18 Ath?na Coustenis LESIA (Bat. 18) Observatoire de Paris 92195 Meudon Cedex, France Tel: 331 45 07 77 20 Markus Hartung ESO Santiago Chile Tel: +56 2 463 3071 |
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