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[personal profile] mmcirvin
This is the best summary I've seen of early science results from the Huygens Titan probe.

There's evidence of rainfall, not in some distant historic epoch but ongoing; but how frequent this is is still unknown. The liquid with a water-like role on Titan is methane; other light hydrocarbons are present, but the role of rocks and dirt is played by water. They think that the dark branching channels are stained by photochemical smog in the atmosphere, which condenses out as a dark coating of complex organics on the ice hills and then gets washed into the channels by the methane rain. It's still unclear whether there is open liquid anywhere, but it sounds to me as if the typical "sea" area on Titan may actually be a sort of methane-saturated mudflat with a fragile crust of more solid ice at the top. The probe boiled a significant amount of methane out of the ground just by dumping waste heat and the output of a 20-watt light bulb into the soil.

One of the most mysterious results is that Titan seems to be absolutely devoid of inert gases like argon, krypton and xenon, except for an isotope of argon produced by radioactive decay.

Scientists are, of course, already talking about what they'd like the next Titan mission to be: a blimp or a rover. But I'm afraid they'll have a lot of time to think about it—it's difficult and expensive to get anything to Saturn, even by the standards of planetary-science missions.
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