本帖最后由 q5968661 于 2008-12-18 18:15 编辑
Possible Cryovolcanoes on Titan
A cold volcano seems like an oxymoron, but active "cryovolcanoes" may actually be spewing a super-chilled liquid into the atmosphere of Saturn's moon Titan. The beauty of Cassini's long and now extended mission is the numerous flybys the spacecraft is able to take of several of Saturn's most interesting moons. We reported yesterday how scientists have been able to see how Enceladus' surface and its geysers are changing over time, and now data collected during several recent flybys of Titan show alternations in that moon's surface as well. "Cassini data have raised the possibility that Titan's surface is active," said Jonathan Lunine, a Cassini interdisciplinary scientist from the Lunar and Planetary Laboratory, at the University of Arizona, Tucson . "This is based on evidence that changes have occurred on the surface of Titan, between flybys of Cassini, in regions where radar images suggest a kind of volcanism has taken place."
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Amazing Close-up Images Show Enceladus is Changing
Saturn's moon Enceladus not only has jets of water vapor spewing from vents on the southern hemisphere, but the moon's surface in the same region shows evidence of changes over time, providing surprising indications of Earth-like tectonics. New high resolution images from the Cassini spacecraft's recent flybys of Enceladus show close views of the moon's distinctive "tiger stripe" fractures, yielding new insight into what may be happening inside the fractures. "Of all the geologic provinces in the Saturn system that Cassini has explored, none has been more thrilling or carries greater implications than the region at the southernmost portion of Enceladus," said Carolyn Porco, Cassini imaging team leader.
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"cryovolcanoes":冰火山还是冷火山? |