The atmosphere of Titan: An analysis of the Voyager 1 radio occultation measurements
Abstract
Two coherently related radio signals transmitted from Voyager 1 at wavelengths of 13 cm (S-band) and 3.6 cm (X-band) were used to probe the equatorial atmosphere of Titan. The measurements were conducted during the occultation of the spacecraft by the satellite on November 12, 1980. An analysis of the differential dispersive frequency measurements did not reveal any ionization layers in the upper atmosphere of Titan. The resolution was approximately 3 × 10 3 and 5 × 10 3 electrons/cm 3 near the evening and morning terminators, respectively. Abrupt signal changes observed at ingress and egress indicated a surface radius of 2575.0 ± 0.5 km, leading to a mean density of 1.881 ± 0.002 g cm -3 for the satellite. The nondispersive data were used to derive profiles in height of the gas refractivity and microwave absorption in Titan's troposphere and stratosphere. No absorption was detected; the resolution was about 0.01 dB/km at the 13-cm wavelength. The gas refractivity data, which extend from the surface to about 200 km altitude, were interpreted in two different ways. In the first, it is assumed that N 2 makes up essentially all of the atmosphere, but with very small amounts of CH 4 and other hydrocarbons also present. This approach yielded a temperature and pressure at the surface of 94.0 ± 0.7°K and 1496 ± 20 mbar, respectively. The tropopause, which was detected near 42 km altitude, had a temperature of 71.4 ± 0.5°K and a pressure of about 130 mbar. Above the tropopause, the temperature increased with height, reaching 170 ± 15°K near the 200-km level. The maximum temperature lapse rate observed near the surface (1.38 ± 0.10°K/km) corresponds to the adiabatic value expected for a dry N 2 atmosphere—indicating that methane saturation did not occur in tbis region. Above the 3.5-km altitude level the lapse rate dropped abruptly to 0.9 ± 0.1°K/km and then decreased slowly with increasing altitude, crossing zero at the tropopause. For the N 2 atmospheric model, the lapse rate transition at the 3.5-km level appears to mark the boundary between a convective region near the surface having the dry adiabatic lapse rate, and a higher stable region in radiative equilibrium. In the second interpretation of the refractivity data, it is assumed, instead, that the 3.5 km altitude level corresponds to the bottom of a CH 4 cloud layer, and that N 2 and CH 4 are perfectly mixed below this level. These assumptions lead to an atmospheric model which below the clouds contains about 10% CH 4 by number density. The temperature near the surface is about 95°K. Arguments concerning the temperature lapse rates computed from the radio measurements appear to favor models in which methane forms at most a limited haze layer high in the troposphere.
- Publication:
-
Icarus
- Pub Date:
- February 1983
- DOI:
- 10.1016/0019-1035(83)90155-0
- Bibcode:
- 1983Icar...53..348L
- Keywords:
-
- Atmospheric Sounding;
- Radio Occultation;
- Satellite Atmospheres;
- Titan;
- Voyager 1 Spacecraft;
- Atmospheric Composition;
- Atmospheric Models;
- Equatorial Atmosphere;
- Methane;
- Nitrogen;
- Temperature Profiles;
- SATURATION;
- MODELS;
- SURFACE;
- MIXING;
- FORMATION;
- SATURN;
- SATELLITES;
- TITAN;
- ANALYSIS;
- VOYAGER 1;
- RADIO OBSERVATIONS;
- OCCULTATIONS;
- GASES;
- WAVELENGTHS;
- ATMOSPHERE;
- EQUATORIAL REGIONS;
- FREQUENCIES;
- IONIZATION;
- LAYERS;
- DENSITY;
- REFRACTIVITY;
- MICROWAVES;
- ABSORPTION;
- TROPOSPHERE;
- STRATOSPHERE;
- ALTITUDE;
- COMPOSITION;
- NITROGEN;
- METHANE;
- HYDROCARBONS;
- TEMPERATURE;
- PRESSURE;
- TROPOPAUSE;
- LAPSE RATE