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Origin of Oxygen Species in Titan

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Origin of Oxygen Species in Titan s Atmosphere Sarah M. H rst, V ronqiue Vuitton, Roger V. Yelle Lunar and Planetary Laboratory, University of Arizona – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Origin of Oxygen Species in Titan


1
Origin of Oxygen Species in Titans Atmosphere
  • Sarah M. Hörst, Véronqiue Vuitton, Roger V. Yelle
  • Lunar and Planetary Laboratory, University of
    Arizona
  • horst_at_lpl.arizona.edu
  • Results
  • Results shown are for Model 2

Introduction The Saturnian system is oxygen rich.
Sources include the rings and satellites,
especially Enceladus Hansen et al. 2006.
Recently, the Cassini Plasma Spectrometer (CAPS)
detected O precipitating into Titans atmosphere
Hartle et al. 2006. Other recent Cassini
results have made it clear that surprisingly
complex molecules are synthesized in Titan's
upper atmosphere Vuitton et al. 2007. The
possibility that oxygen could be incorporated
into organic molecules of this complexity through
natural atmospheric processes is quite exciting.
Additionally, the origin of the CO, CO2, and H2O
observed in Titans atmosphere is unknown.
Thermochemical considerations imply that the main
nitrogen- and carbon-bearing species in the
primordial solar nebula were either N2 and CO or
NH3 and CH4 Prinn and Fegley 1981. The
existence of an N2-CH4 atmosphere on Titan is
thus unexpected. CO plays an important role in
most hypothesized explanations. If the origin of
CO on Titan could be determined, it would
represent a significant constraint on physical
conditions early in the history of the solar
system.
O Deposition Altitude
Here we investigate the fate of the observed O
and explore the possibility that O-bearing
species in Titans atmosphere are connected to
other sources of O in the Saturnian system.
Mole fractions listed are at 150 km
Model 2
  • Previous Work
  • CO has been observed in Titans atmosphere using
    numerous telescopes and Cassini CIRS and VIMS.
    Though early discrepancies in the observations
    indicated that the CO abundance varies with
    altitude, more recent observations, including
    those by Cassini, indicate that the CO mole
    fraction is constant with altitude at 5 x 10-5.
    Observations from Voyager 1 2, ISO and CIRS
    indicate that the CO2 abundance is roughly
    constant from equator to pole and constant with
    altitude above the condensation level with a
    value of 1.5 x 10-8. The globally averaged
    abundance of H2O was determined by ISO, 8 x 10-9
    at 400 km. It was not detected by CIRS.
  • Summary of observations
  • CO 5 x 10-5 at 150 km (e.g. de Kok et al. 2007)
  • CO2 1.5 x 10-8 at 150 km (e.g. de Kok et al.
    2007)
  • H2O 8 x 10-9 at 400 km, globally averaged
    (Coustenis et al. 1998)
  • Previous photochemical models have been unable to
    simultaneously reproduce the observed abundances
    of CO, CO2 and H2O. Their difficulties were
    complicated by the use of a reaction whose
    products were poorly understood. Wong et al.
    2002 reviewed laboratory experiments and
    concluded that the reaction between CH3 and OH
    does not produce CO as assumed by all previous
    models. Instead the reaction proceeds as OH CH3
    ? H2O CH2, recycling the water that was
    destroyed by photolysis instead of forming CO
    Wong et al. 2002. The realization that OH from
    micrometeorite ablation is not the source of CO
    and CO2 led later models to use another source of
    CO or to fix the CO abundance to observations.
    The previous photochemical models are summarized
    in Table 2.
  • Previously suggested sources of oxygen-bearing
    species
  • H2O from micrometeorite ablation (e.g. Yung et
    al. 1984, English et al. 1996)

Photodissociation Rates
Chemical Reaction Rates
Oxygen-bearing Species
  • Discussion and Conclusions
  • Input of O alone produces only CO which lacks an
    effective loss process thus steady-state
    solutions are not possible. Input of OH or H2O
    alone does not produce CO and only produces CO2
    if CO is already present
  • Larger values of K require larger fluxes because
    the molecules formed in the upper atmosphere are
    transported to the loss region in the lower
    atmosphere more quickly
  • Necessary ratio of OH flux to O flux decreases
    with increasing eddy coefficient. The best
    example is Model 1 where significantly less O
    flux is required and the ratio of OH flux to O
    flux is much larger than the other models. This
    occurs because sluggish eddy mixing builds up
    large CO2 densities in the lower atmosphere. The
    CO2 photolyzes to produce O that react with CH3
    producing CO, so less input O is required
  • Unlikely that the input fluxes are constant with
    time, vertical transport time for minor
  • constituents in Titan's atmosphere approximately
    by Ha2/Ko, which has a value of 1000 years for
    Ha 30 km and Ko 200 cm2s-1. Composition could
    change with time in response to changing
    magnetospheric conditions, these changes would be
    difficult to detect.

The observed densities of CO, CO2 and H2O in
Titan's atmosphere can be explained by a
combination of O and OH or H2O input to the upper
atmosphere. Given the detection of O
precipitation into Titan's upper atmosphere, it
is no longer necessary to invoke outgassing from
Titan's interior as the source for atmospheric
CO. Instead, a more iikely source is Enceladus.
  • The Model
  • hydrocarbon network- 40 species, 130
    neutral-neutral reactions and 40
    photodissociations (reaction list from Vuitton et
    al. 2007)
  • 10 oxygen species, 32 neutral-neutral reactions
  • calculated oxygen ion deposition altitude using
    theoretical stopping cross sections
  • 1 keV oxygen deposited at 1100 km
  • assume neutral once deposited, final charge
    state is O(3P)
  • temperature profile based on HASI, GCMS, CIRS,
    INMS and interpolation of Yelle et al. 2007
  • eddy diffusion profile where ?
    0.9 po1.43x105 dyne
    cm-2 k83x107 cm2s-1
  • flux given by
  • adjusted OH and O(3P) fluxes to reproduce
    observed abundances of CO, CO2 and H2O for five
    values of Ko
  • assumed observed abundances of CO, CO2 and H2O
    are constant in time and model them with
    steady-state solutions to our chemistry/transport
    model

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