Welcome to (another) Dune-ish World!

Intriguing Planetary Science Images

A radar scan of Titans surface, showing wind-whipped dunes. Courtesy NASA and the Cassini Mission Team. (Click to embiggen).
A radar scan of Titan's surface, showing wind-whipped dunes. Courtesy NASA/Cassini Mission Team. (Click to embiggen).

The Cassini mission keeps coming up with more surprises out at Saturn — and especially on Titan.  Normally we can’t see anything on Titan (at least optically) except its cloudy atmosphere. But, when Cassini turns on its radar mapper and scans the surface, an amazing wealth of surface features just leap out at us.

A closeup of dunes on Titan.  Courtesy NASA/Cassini Mission. (Click to embiggen.)
A closeup of dunes on Titan. Courtesy NASA/Cassini Mission. (Click to embiggen.)

A couple of weeks ago, the Cassini mission’s high-resolution radar system mapped a series of dune fields on Titan. These dunes are moved around by surface winds, and most likely are built-up piles of hydrocarbon sand grains that come from combinations of organic chemicals in Titan’s smoggy atmosphere. The winds blow them along, wrapping them around any surface features that stick up as obstacles in their paths.

From the radar images that Cassini sent back, planetary scientists were able to count up to 16,000 dune segments that act as a sort of weather vane, pointing the direction in which the winds blow on Titan.

As the winds change direction, the orientation of the dune fields also change. The winds come from several different directions, and the dunes reflect that in the way they line up and appear to be cutting across each other in some places. These dunes appear to be concentrated mostly around Titan’s equator. This is probably because weather conditions are drier there — which means there are more particles for the winds to pick up and scatter along their paths.

Conditions elsewhere on Titan are too “wet” because there are more lakes of liquid hydrocarbons. This makes it less likely that the climate will “dry out” enough to form these sand grains.

The Kuiseb river region in Namibia is bordered by wind-blown dune fields. Courtesy NASA. (Click to embiggen.)
The Kuiseb river region in Namibia is bordered by wind-blown dune fields. Courtesy NASA.

If you’re thinking this is all looking very familiar — it is.  Earth’s deserts and dune fields exist in dry climates, where winds can pick up grains of sand and dust and blow them around — forming traveling dunes.

Windblow dunes in and around a crater in the Syrtis Major volcanic region on Mars. Courtesy NASA/Mars Global Survery
Windblow dunes in and around a crater in the Syrtis Major volcanic region on Mars. Courtesy NASA/Mars Global Surveyor. (Click to embiggen.)

We see similar things on Mars, which is peppered with dune fields on its broad plains and inside some of its larger craters.

Anyone who has traveled in the American Southwest, for example, or in the deserts of North Africa, will be familiar with dunes. They move the same way on Earth as they do on Mars and now, Titan.

Images and discoveries like these of dunes on other worlds are all part of planetary science. Or, if you like, comparative planetology. Essentially when we look at other planets, we look for things we can explain and understand based on processes we see and usually understand here on Earth.

What are those processes?  Think of them in terms of what modifies a planet. What changes its surface or its atmosphere?  It’s easiest to think about what happens to Earth over time.  Geologists look at processes like volcanism (the action of volcanoes and volcanic flows), tectonism (faulting and folding of a planet’s outer layer), impact cratering (when projectiles slam into the surface and create craters), and atmospheric processes.  Geology is, in fact, a huge part of planetary science.

In the case of dune creation on Earth and other worlds, planetary scientists focus on the atmospheric processes that shape a planet. These can be things like rain or snow falling onto a surface and changing it in some way. Or, it can be chemical weathering — that is, the action of a chemical like (say) sulfuric acid falling as rain on a surface and eating away at it.  Or, we can see what’s called “aeolian” (wind-blown) changes to a surface. Sometimes this means that a surface is scoured clean by winds. Or, it can mean — as we’ve sen in these images of Titan, Earth, and Mars — that winds are taking what’s already present on the surface — piles of sand and dust — and moving them along, forming dunes as they go.

As we see more familiar processes occurring on other worlds, we can more easily explain them in terms of what we know about from what we see on Earth. These intriguing images, and many others taken by scores of spacecraft at other planets, are — in a very large sense — making us more at home in the solar system, even as they teach us about our own planet’s place in the hierarchy of worlds that orbit the Sun.

The Stuff Between the Galaxies

What is It?

This computer simulation by Matt Hall (NCSA) and Eric Hallman (Univ. Colorado) shows the warm-hot intergalactic medium (blue) that runs along filaments between galaxies and galaxy clusters.  (Click to biggify.)
This computer simulation by Matt Hall (NCSA) and Eric Hallman (Univ. Colorado) shows the warm-hot intergalactic medium (blue) that runs along filaments between galaxies and galaxy clusters. (Click to biggify.)

Living in a galaxy is like living in a big city.  There’s always something going on, there’s always somebody around. Even if you live out in the country, you’re still not that far from the nearest neighbor or town or burg or hamlet. But, let’s say you lived out in the desert, hundreds of kilometers from anything. You’d be surrounded by nothing, right?

Well, not exactly. It depends on how you define “nothing.”  If you think that a lack of towns or neighbors means there’s nothing out there, that’s one way to think of it. But, you’d still have sand and plants and animals surrounding you. They’re not in your social set, but that doesn’t  mean they don’t exist.

The same thing goes for galaxies and the space between them.  That space may look empty, but it’s  not.  Our galaxy is part of a cluster of galaxies called the Local Group.  The space between our galaxy and the ones next door is filled with material even though (to us with visible-light eyes) it looks like it’s empty.

While you may have heard that there’s a dark matter halo out there surrounding the Milky Way, there’s also regular old baryonic matter.

How do we know this? Bruce Dorminey, who writes for ScienceNow Daily News, sent me an article he wrote about a detection of regular matter between galaxies that was done using x-rays.

How so?  As light travels through the intergalactic medium, it encounters “stuff” — atoms of gases in clouds.  As light from more distant objects runs through those clouds, some of it is absorbed by the material.  We can actually see the fingerprints of this absorption when we look at that light through a spectrograph.

It turns out that these clouds are likely absorbing x-rays (which are also part of the electromagnetic spectrum). David Buote of the University of California at Irvine and a group of astronomers used the Chandra X-ray observatory and the European Space Agency’s XMM-Newton observatory to look at a portion of an object called the Sculptor Wall, part of a large collection of galaxies that lie about 400 million light-years away.  They were specifically looking for the fingerprints of O VII — oxygen that has been stripped of five of its eight electrons.  This O VII is part of what astronomers call the “warm-hot intergalactic medium” — a sort of rarefied plasma that absorbs various wavelengths of light, including x-rays.  Buote and his colleagues are saying that there’s an excellent chance that their discovery will hold up and that they have found another way to probe the matter that exists in the intergalactic medium. Their research will be published in the April 20th issue of Astrophysical Journal.

Astronomers have long known that the intergalactic void wasn’t completely empty, but this new work shows us what’s filling it in some places. It has pretty important implications for how we understand what astronomers call the “large-scale structure of the universe.”  This is because we are still trying to understand just how matter is distributed — whether it’s regular matter or dark matter.  In the long term, astronomers use studies like this to model just how galaxies are formed and how the universe has evolved since it began 13.7 billion years ago.