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Titan: High-Resolution Speckle Images from the Keck Telescope

✍ Scribed by S.G. Gibbard; B. Macintosh; D. Gavel; C.E. Max; I. de Pater; A.M. Ghez; E.F. Young; C.P. McKay


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
532 KB
Volume
139
Category
Article
ISSN
0019-1035

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✦ Synopsis


Saturn's large moon Titan is unique among planetary satellites in that it possesses a thick atmosphere and a haze layer that is opaque to visible light. This haze is believed to be composed of organic compounds produced by the photolysis of methane. It has been suggested that the photochemical products of methane photolysis, primarily ethane, would "rain out" over time and may produce reservoirs of liquid hydrocarbons on Titan's surface. Such material would appear very dark, with an albedo ≀0.02 (Khare et al. 1990, Bull. Am. Astron. Soc. 22, 1033). Such low-albedo regions have not been previously detected on Titan's surface. Here we report observations of Titan at a resolution of 0.04 arcsec (0.02 arcsec/pixel) using the technique of speckle imaging from the 10-m Keck I Telescope. By observing Titan at specific infrared wavelengths which are windows through its atmosphere, we have made both an albedo map of Titan's surface at 1.6 and 2.1 Β΅m and an estimate of Titan's haze optical depth at these wavelengths. We clearly distinguish low-albedo features (reflectance <0.05) on Titan's surface.


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High-Resolution Infrared Imaging of Nept
✍ S.G. Gibbard; H. Roe; I. de Pater; B. Macintosh; D. Gavel; C.E. Max; K.H. Baines πŸ“‚ Article πŸ“… 2002 πŸ› Elsevier Science 🌐 English βš– 830 KB

We present results of infrared observations of Neptune from the 10-m W. M. Keck I Telescope, using both high-resolution (0.04 arcsecond) broadband speckle imaging and conventional imaging with narrowband filters (0.6 arcsec resolution). The speckle data enable us to track the size and shape of infra