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<font color="orange"> it was a great acheivement just to get any at all.<font color="white"><br /><br />The glow from Titans atmosphere provides enough light for any future probe to roam on its surface without <br />using as much energy to illuminate it. This will be valuable stuff for future Titan aerial or land rovers<br /> to see the surface with better equipment with a longer timeline.<br /><br /><font color="orange">When the probe landed, it was not with a thud, or a splash, but a 'splat'. It landed in Titanian 'mud'. <br /><br />"I think the biggest surprise is that we survived landing and that we lasted so long," said DISR team member<br /> Charles See. "There wasn't even a glitch at impact. That landing was a lot friendlier than we anticipated." <br /><br />DISR's downward-looking High Resolution Imager camera lens apparently accumulated some material,<br /> which suggests the probe may have settled into the surface. "Either that, or we steamed hydrocarbons off<br /> the surface and they collected onto the lens," said See. <br /><br /><font color="white">Here is a link to ESA desent images as the probe was landing.<br /><br />http://www.esa.int/SPECIALS/Cassini-Huygens/SEM5YW71Y3E_1.html</font></font></font></font> <div class="Discussion_UserSignature"> Ron Bennett </div>
Here is a composite image comparing what we can call a panoramic view of a shoreline on Titan and a shoreline on Earth, the French Riviera, all black and white.<br /><br />www.titanexploration.com
I'm confused here and I'm probably seeing things...but in the first set of three, in the third one, almost in the middle, it looks to me like a volcano or a very straight up mountain? Okay...you 'space' experts tell me what I'm really seeing here...
If its round or oval shaped it is probably something, artifacts can be round or oval, if its square it is <br />most likely pixel burnout. <div class="Discussion_UserSignature"> Ron Bennett </div>
<font color="orange">It seems that Titan is right on the target of hydrocarbons slush and mud on its surface.<font color="white"> <br /><br />From what we are hearing it sure looks that way.<br /><br />Kind of makes you think doesn't it, Tardygrades would be right at home there. <br /><br />If something doesn't freeze into a solid state - can there still be life there????<br /><br />Here is a color image of the surface of Titan from three different cameras. I colorized all three images <br />from greyscale images at the same time. <br /><br />I'm still working on a sharper image.<br /> <br /></font></font> <div class="Discussion_UserSignature"> Ron Bennett </div>