The Fate of Simple Organics on Titan's Surface: A Theoretical Perspective

Author:

Yu Xinting1ORCID,Yu Yue23,Garver Julia4,Zhang Xi2ORCID,McGuiggan Patricia5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physics and Astronomy University of Texas at San Antonio San Antonio TX USA

2. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences University of California Santa Cruz Santa Cruz CA USA

3. Department of Astronomy University of Geneva Geneva Switzerland

4. Department of Physics University of California Santa Cruz Santa Cruz CA USA

5. Department of Materials Science and Engineering Johns Hopkins University Baltimore MD USA

Abstract

AbstractAtmospheric photochemistry on Titan continuously transforms methane and nitrogen gases into various organic compounds. This study explores the fate of these molecules when they land on Titan's surface. Our analytical exploration reveals that most simple organics found in Titan's atmosphere, including all nitriles, triple‐bonded hydrocarbons, and benzene, land as solids. Only a few compounds are in the liquid phase, while only ethylene remains gaseous. For the simple organics that land as solids, we further examine their interactions with Titan's lake liquids. Utilizing principles of buoyancy, we found that flotation can be achieved via porosity‐induced (25%–60% porosity) or capillary force‐induced buoyancy for hydrogen cyanide ices on ethane‐rich lakes. Otherwise, these ices would sink and become lakebed sediments. By evaluating the timescale of flotation, our findings suggest that porosity‐induced flotation of millimeter‐sized and larger sediments is the only plausible mechanism for floating solids to explain the transient “magic islands” phenomena on Titan's lakes.

Funder

Heising-Simons Foundation

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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