
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.
Saturn's huge moon Titan may not hide an ocean under its frozen surface but rather widespread pockets of liquid water, a new study finds.
Titan is the largest of the 274 known moons orbiting Saturn. In fact, Titan is bigger than the planet Mercury.
"I love Titan — I think it's one of the most interesting worlds in the solar system," study lead author Flavio Petricca, a planetary scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, told Space.com. "It's the only moon in our solar system with an atmosphere, and it's the only body with liquid on its surface other than Earth."
Scientists have long suspected that seas might also lurk under Titan's icy shell. For instance, the way Titan flexes under Saturn's gravity suggests that the moon is home to a vast underground ocean.
In the new study, Petricca and his colleagues wanted to reexamine Titan using new, improved methods to analyze radio tracking data. These new techniques greatly reduced uncertainties regarding data gathered by NASA's Cassini mission of Titan's interior.
Unexpectedly, the scientists discovered that Titan's interior is resisting distortion from Saturn's gravitational pull to a much greater degree than previously thought. This suggests Titan likely does not have a hidden ocean, but instead a layer of ice close to its melting point that is kept from liquefying by high pressure. This slushy icy likely hosts pockets of liquid water, the researchers added.
Titan may once have had an underground ocean near the beginning of its history, Petricca said. There may not have been enough heat from radioactive elements in its core to keep this ocean from freezing, he noted. "It may be going through a phase again where heating is increasing again," Petricca added.
All in all, ocean worlds may be less common than recently thought, the scientists noted. "We're not certain if having widespread liquid pockets instead of a global ocean makes Titan more or less habitable," Petricca said. "It will be interesting to find out."
NASA's upcoming Dragonfly mission to Titan can help scan the moon to better understand its geology. "We'll better understand the conditions for habitability there," Petricca said.
The scientists detailed their findings online Dec. 17 in the journal Nature.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Story of ‘first Black Briton’ rewritten by advances in ancient DNA technology - 2
‘Grit’ and relentless perseverance can take a toll on brain health − particularly for people facing social stresses like racism - 3
NASA loses contact with its Maven spacecraft orbiting Mars for the past decade - 4
Takeaways from AP’s report on potential impacts of Alaska’s proposed Ambler Access Road - 5
Top 15 Supportable Design Brands Coming out on top
Authorities arrest 7 bodyguards in connection with a Mexican mayor's assassination
A new mom skipped a routine appointment. An infected cut led to a devastating diagnosis
'Sex and the City' star Kim Cattrall marries longtime partner Russell Thomas in intimate London wedding
Atorvastatin recall may affect hundreds of thousands of patients – and reflects FDA’s troubles inspecting medicines manufactured overseas
10 Setting up camp Shelters That Offer Both Excellence and Isolation
Taylor Momsen explains why she quit 'Gossip Girl': 'I really didn't want to be there'
Russian drone slams into block of flats in deadly wave of strikes across Kyiv
UN panel says Israel operating 'de facto policy of torture'
EU agrees on agriculture safeguards as fronts harden in Mercosur deal











