Titan, Saturn's largest moon, is a
peculiar1 place. Unlike any other moon, it has a
dense2 atmosphere. It has rivers and lakes made up of
components3 of natural gas, such as ethane and
methane4. It also has windswept
dunes5 that are hundreds of yards high, more than a mile wide and hundreds of miles long -- despite data suggesting the body to have only light breezes. Research led by Devon Burr, an associate professor in Earth and Planetary Sciences Department at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, shows that winds on Titan must blow faster than
previously6 thought to move sand. The discovery may explain how the dunes were formed.
The findings are published in the current edition of the academic journal Nature.
A decade ago, Burr and other scientists were amazed by the Cassini spacecraft's pictures of Titan that showed never-before-seen dunes created by particles not previously known to have existed.
"It was surprising that Titan had particles the size of grains of sand -- we still don't understand their source -- and that it had winds strong enough to move them," said Burr. "Before seeing the images, we thought the winds were likely too light to accomplish this movement."
The biggest mystery, however, was the shape of the dunes. The Cassini data showed that the predominant winds that shaped the dunes blew from east to west. However, the streamlined appearance of the dunes around obstacles like mountains and
craters7 indicated they were created by winds moving in exactly the opposite direction.
To get to the bottom of this
conundrum8, Burr
dedicated9 six years to refurbishing a
defunct10 NASA high-pressure wind tunnel to recreate Titan's surface conditions. She and her team then turned up the tunnel's pressure to simulate Titan's dense atmosphere, turned on the wind tunnel fan, and studied how the experimental sand behaved. Because of
uncertainties11 in the properties of sand on Titan, they used 23 different varieties of sand in the wind tunnel to capture the possible sand behavior on Titan.
After two years of many models and recalibrations, the team discovered that the minimum wind on Titan has to be about 50 percent faster than previously thought to move the sand.
"Our models started with previous wind speed models but we had to keep tweaking them to match the wind tunnel data," said Burr. "We discovered that movement of sand on Titan's surface needed a wind speed that was higher than what previous models suggested."
The reason for the needed tweaking was the dense atmosphere. So this finding also
validates12 the use of the older models for bodies with thin atmospheres, like comets and
asteroids13.