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Composition of Titan''s surface from Cassini VIMS
Authors:T.B. McCord, G.B. Hansen, B.J. Buratti, R.N. Clark, D.P. Cruikshank, E. D&#x  Aversa, C.A. Griffith, E.K.H. Baines, R.H. Brown, C.M. Dalle Ore, G. Filacchione, V. Formisano, C.A. Hibbitts, R. Jaumann, J.I. Lunine, R.M. Nelson, C. Sotin,the Cassini VIMS Team
Affiliation:

aSpace Science Institute NW, 22 Fiddler's Road, Winthrop, WA 98862-0667, USA

bDepartment of E. & Sp. Sci, 351310, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA

cJet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, CA 91109, USA

dUSGS, Mail Stop 964, Box 25046, Denver Federal Center, Denver, CO, USA

eNASA Ames Research Center, Astrophysics Branch, Moffett Field, CA 94035, USA

fInstituto Fisica Spazio Interplanetario, CNR, Via Fosso del Cavaliere, Roma, Italy

gDepartment Pl. Sci and LPL, University of AZ, Tucson, AZ 85721-0092, USA

hSETI Institute, 515 N. Whisman Road, Mountain View, CA 94043, USA

iJohns Hopkins University Appl. Phys. Laboratory, Columbia, MD, USA

jDLR, Institute for Planet, Expl. Rutherfordstrasse 2, D-12489 Berlin, Germany

kUniversity of Nantes, BP 92208, 2 rue de la Houssinière, 44072 Nantes Cedex 3, France

Abstract:Titan's bulk density along with Solar System formation models indicates considerable water as well as silicates as its major constituents. This satellite's dense atmosphere of nitrogen with methane is unique. Deposits or even oceans of organic compounds have been suggested to exist on Titan's solid surface due to UV-induced photochemistry in the atmosphere. Thus, the composition of the surface is a major piece of evidence needed to determine Titan's history. However, studies of the surface are hindered by the thick, absorbing, hazy and in some places cloudy atmosphere. Ground-based telescope investigations of the integral disk of Titan attempted to observe the surface albedo in spectral windows between methane absorptions by calculating and removing the haze effects. Their results were reported to be consistent with water ice on the surface that is contaminated with a small amount of dark material, perhaps organic material like tholin. We analyze here the recent Cassini Mission's visual and infrared mapping spectrometer (VIMS) observations that resolve regions on Titan. VIMS is able to see surface features and shows that there are spectral and therefore likely compositional units. By several methods, spectral albedo estimates within methane absorption windows between 0.75 and 5 μm were obtained for different surface units using VIMS image cubes from the Cassini-Huygens Titan Ta encounter. Of the spots studied, there appears to be two compositional classes present that are associated with the lower albedo and the higher albedo materials, with some variety among the brighter regions. These were compared with spectra of several different candidate materials. Our results show that the spectrum of water ice contaminated with a darker material matches the reflectance of the lower albedo Titan regions if the spectral slope from 2.71 to 2.79 μm in the poorly understood 2.8-μm methane window is ignored. The spectra for brighter regions are not matched by the spectrum of water ice or unoxidized tholin, in pure form or in mixtures with sufficient ice or tholin present to allow the water ice or tholin spectral features to be discerned. We find that the 2.8-μm methane absorption window is complex and seems to consist of two weak subwindows at 2.7 and 2.8 μm that have unknown opacities. A ratio image at these two wavelengths reveals an anomalous region on Titan that has a reflectance unlike any material so far identified, but it is unclear how much the reflectances in these two subwindows pertain to the surface.
Keywords:Satellites   Titan   Surface   Composition   Cassini   Spectroscopy
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