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The Planetary Society BlogBy Emily LakdawallaMountain range on TitanDec. 26, 2006 | 10:48 PST | 18:48 UTC
A couple of weeks ago there were press releases coming out of the American Geophysical Union meeting about the discovery of a "massive mountain range" on Titan. On the face of it, this isn't all that exciting an announcement. After all, there are plenty of mountains on other planets that are pretty easy to find -- think about Mars' volcanoes, Venus' tesserae, and various kinds of ridges and hills all over the place on all the other solid surfaces in the solar system.
Achievement or not, the mountains are a little hard to make out, so I sent off an email to VIMS team member Larry Soderblom to asked him how confident they were in their interpretation. He replied, I am very sure that we're seeing topography in the form of the NNW-SSE mountain belts. We see them at different wavelengths in all three of the clearest methane windows (1.3, 1.6, 2.0 microns) and the contrast between the brighter and darker sides of the chains varies among the three spectral channels as we'd expect. I believe that the patterns you are describing [the most prominent bright and dark markings] drape over the mountain ranges and are probably due to thin coatings of different hydrocarbon materials as well as the removal of the same. There's a general consensus among the Titan scientists that these are mountain ranges. Now that we are pretty sure they're there in Release 2 we can also pick out the same ones and several other parallel sets in the lower resolution images from [flyby] T17 in Release 1. It appears also that their contrast increases toward the terminator as would be expected.The mountains are described as being about 150 kilometers long, 30 kilometers wide, and about 1.5 kilometers high. These aren't tall as mountains go, but they're taller than the Europan ridges (which tend to be a few hundred meters tall), so they're fairly significant in size. Kudos to the VIMS team for finding them. The fact that it's hard to find mountains is just another example of why studying Titan is hard.
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