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Titan, a Moon of Saturn,
Casts Revealing Shadow
On January 5, 2003, Titan transited the Crab Nebula, the remnant
of a supernova explosion that was observed to occur in the year
1054. Although Saturn and Titan pass within a few degrees of the
Crab Nebula every 30 years, they rarely pass directly in front
of it.
“This may have been the first transit of the Crab Nebula
by Titan since the birth of the nebula,” said Koji
Mori of
Penn State, lead author on an Astrophysical
Journal paper describing
these results. “The next similar conjunction will take place
in the year 2267, so this was truly a once in a lifetime event.
“Chandra’s
observation revealed that the diameter of the X-ray shadow cast
by Titan was larger than the diameter of its solid surface. The
difference in diameters gives a measurement of about 550 miles
(880 kilometers) for the height of the X-ray absorbing region of
Titan’s atmosphere. The extent of the upper atmosphere
is consistent with, or slightly (10-15%) larger, than that implied
by Voyager I observations made at radio, infrared, and ultraviolet
wavelengths in 1980.
“Saturn was about 5% closer to the Sun
in 2003, so increased solar heating of Titan may account for some
of this atmospheric expansion,” said
Hiroshi Tsunemi of Osaka
University in Japan, one of the coauthors
on the paper.
The X-ray brightness and extent of the Crab Nebula
made it possible to study the tiny X-ray shadow cast by Titan during
its transit. By using Chandra to precisely track Titan’s
position, astronomers were able to measure a shadow one arcsecond
in diameter, which corresponds to the size of a dime as viewed
from about two and a half miles.
Unlike almost all of Chandra’s
images which are made by focusing X-ray emission from cosmic sources,
Titan’s X-ray shadow
image was produced in a manner similar to a medical X-ray. That
is, an X-ray source (the Crab Nebula) is used to make a shadow
image (Titan and its atmosphere) that is recorded on film using
Chandra’s Advanced CCD Imaging Spectrometer (ACIS) instrument.
Titan’s atmosphere, which is about 95% nitrogen and 5%
methane, has a pressure near the surface that is one and a half
times the Earth’s sea level pressure. Voyager I spacecraft
measured the structure of Titan’s atmosphere at heights
below about 300 miles (500 kilometers), and above 600 miles (1000
kilometers). Until the Chandra observations, however, no measurements
existed at heights in the range between 300 and 600 miles.
Understanding
the extent of Titan’s atmosphere is important
for the planners of the Cassini-Huygens
mission. The Cassini-Huygens
spacecraft is just beginning a four-year tour of Saturn, its
rings, and its moons. The tour will include close flybys of Titan
that will take Cassini as close as 600 miles, and the launching
of the Huygens probe that will land on Titan’s surface.
“If
Titan’s atmosphere has really expanded, the trajectory
may have to be changed,” said Tsunemi.
The paper on these
results was published in The Astrophysical
Journal. Other members
of the research team were Haroyoski Katayama of Osaka University,
David Burrows and Gordon
Garmire of Penn State, and Albert Metzger
of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory
(JPL). Chandra observed Titan
from 9:04 to 18:46 UT on January 5, 2003, using its ACIS detector.
NASA’s Marshall
Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Alabama,
manages the Chandra program for the Office of Space Science,
NASA Headquarters, Washington. Northrop Grumman of Redondo Beach,
California, formerly TRW, Inc., was the prime development contractor
for the observatory. The Smithsonian
Astrophysical Observatory controls science and flight operations from the Chandra X-ray
Center in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Megan Watzke, Chandra X-ray Observatory Center
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