The Ash from a Distant Mountain

Watching the Fires from Space

The Southern California Fires as seen by NASA's Earth Observing System Terra satellite. Courtesy NASA. Click to embiggen.

Up here in the Rockies we’re seeing the effects of the Station Fire near Pasadena in a most dramatic way — ash in the air, blood-red sunsets and a red Moon. There’s so much ash floating around that our mountains in the distance look like one of those Japanese watercolor paintings with mist-shrouded hills.

But, far from being mist, this stuff is the particulate matter distributed from the fires consuming more than 100,000 acres (and growing) of brush, trees, and homes.  Overnight the historic (and very busy) Mt. Wilson Observatory was threatened by the fire, but thanks to the efforts of fire crews, the observatory is (so far) spared from the flames. (Note: the link goes to Mt. Wilson’s webcam which may or may not be operating.  For more info about Mt. Wilson itself, go here.)

I find it fascinating to look at the satellite images of this fire — or any fire in any region on our planet.  As time goes by, you’ll see more of these images, with the smoke plumes heading out and affecting other areas.  What happens in one place on our planet inevitably affects other places.  This is why NASA and other space agencies are launching mission after mission to study our home world — to understand the processes it experiences and how all the various systems of our planet are linked together.  Often, as with the fires in SoCal, understanding and studying these topics is a matter of life and death.

The Fog Creeps in on Methane Feet

On Titan, That Is

Artists concept of Titan surface beneath its foggy atmosphere. Courtesy NASA. Click to embiggenate.
Artist's concept of Titan surface beneath its foggy atmosphere. Courtesy NASA. Click to embiggenate.

Astronomer Mike Brown of CalTech (who tweets under the name PlutoKiller) has a fascinating discussion on his blog about fog banks hovering over Titan’s south pole. Titan, if you haven’t been following outer solar system news, is the largest moon of Saturn. It has this thick atmosphere hanging over a frigid surface which itself boasts pools of hydrocarbons in the form of liquid and ice. The hydrocarbons are in the form of ethane (on the surface) and now it appears that the methane forms fog banks in the atmosphere. Methane breaks down in the presence of sunlight to make ethane, so this whole thing seems to point to some sort of cycle between atmosphere and surface on Titan.

I say “seems” because, as Mike discusses, there’s a lot of atmospheric science work to be done to completely understand what’s happening on this shrouded world to make methane clouds form.  Want to know more and see a cool pic? Run over to Mike’s blog and read what he has to say. He also has a link to his science paper outlining the fogbank on Titan and a nice, insightful discussion on peer review of his paper — and he invites folks knowledgeable in the Titan atmosphere to review his paper before it goes to publication.  How cool is that!

Exploring Science and the Cosmos

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