Evidence of Titan's Climate History from Evaporite Distribution

Water-ice-poor, 5-\(\mu\)m-bright material on Saturn's moon Titan has previously been geomorphologically identified as evaporitic. Here we present a global distribution of the occurrences of the 5-\(\mu\)m-bright spectral unit, identified with Cassini's Visual Infrared Mapping Spectrometer...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2014-08
Hauptverfasser: MacKenzie, Shannon M, Barnes, Jason W, Sotin, Christophe, Soderblom, Jason M, Stéphane Le Mouélic, Rodriguez, Sebastien, Baines, Kevin H, Buratti, Bonnie J, Clark, Roger N, Nicholson, Phillip D, McCord, Thomas B
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Water-ice-poor, 5-\(\mu\)m-bright material on Saturn's moon Titan has previously been geomorphologically identified as evaporitic. Here we present a global distribution of the occurrences of the 5-\(\mu\)m-bright spectral unit, identified with Cassini's Visual Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS) and examined with RADAR when possible. We explore the possibility that each of these occurrences are evaporite deposits. The 5-\(\mu\)m-bright material covers 1\% of Titan's surface and is not limited to the poles (the only regions with extensive, long-lived surface liquid). We find the greatest areal concentration to be in the equatorial basins Tui Regio and Hotei Regio. Our interpretations, based on the correlation between 5-\(\mu\)m-bright material and lakebeds, imply that there was enough liquid present at some time to create the observed 5-\(\mu\)m-bright material. We address the climate implications surrounding a lack of evaporitic material at the south polar basins: if the south pole basins were filled at some point in the past, then where is the evaporite?
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.1408.2899