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Organic haze on Titan and the early Earth.


ABSTRACT: Recent exploration by the Cassini/Huygens mission has stimulated a great deal of interest in Saturn's moon, Titan. One of Titan's most captivating features is the thick organic haze layer surrounding the moon, believed to be formed from photochemistry high in the CH(4)/N(2) atmosphere. It has been suggested that a similar haze layer may have formed on the early Earth. Here we report laboratory experiments that demonstrate the properties of haze likely to form through photochemistry on Titan and early Earth. We have used a deuterium lamp to initiate particle production in these simulated atmospheres from UV photolysis. Using a unique analysis technique, the aerosol mass spectrometer, we have studied the chemical composition, size, and shape of the particles produced as a function of initial trace gas composition. Our results show that the aerosols produced in the laboratory can serve as analogs for the observed haze in Titan's atmosphere. Experiments performed under possible conditions for early Earth suggest a significant optical depth of haze may have dominated the early Earth's atmosphere. Aerosol size measurements are presented, and implications for the haze layer properties are discussed. We estimate that aerosol production on the early Earth may have been on the order of 10(14) g.year(-1) and thus could have served as a primary source of organic material to the surface.

SUBMITTER: Trainer MG 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC1838702 | biostudies-literature | 2006 Nov

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Organic haze on Titan and the early Earth.

Trainer Melissa G MG   Pavlov Alexander A AA   DeWitt H Langley HL   Jimenez Jose L JL   McKay Christopher P CP   Toon Owen B OB   Tolbert Margaret A MA  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20061113 48


Recent exploration by the Cassini/Huygens mission has stimulated a great deal of interest in Saturn's moon, Titan. One of Titan's most captivating features is the thick organic haze layer surrounding the moon, believed to be formed from photochemistry high in the CH(4)/N(2) atmosphere. It has been suggested that a similar haze layer may have formed on the early Earth. Here we report laboratory experiments that demonstrate the properties of haze likely to form through photochemistry on Titan and  ...[more]

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