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Titan: A Climate Out of This World
This composite visible/infrared view of Titan shows a world with features strikingly similar to our Earth: clouds, haze, mountain ranges and a thick atmosphere. The true color of Titan is orange.
Credit: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona
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Titan in Saturn's system: Titan (top) emerges from behind its parent planet, Saturn. Another satellite, Tethys, is visible at the bottom left of the picture.
Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute
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The recent observations by Schaller and her colleagues of a giant cloud in the tropics of Titan was a first. But at the poles, clouds are more common. This is a composite visible/infrared view of Titan's North Pole as seen by the Cassini spacecraft. Such clouds might be a source for the liquids that fill the moon's northern lakes.
Credit: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona
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The tropical cloud observed by Emily Schaller from the ground in April 2008. Bright clouds affect the global brightness of Titan's disk, which is why we can detect them just by measuring the intensity of Titan, even when it is seen only as a dot.
Credit: Gemini Observatory/AURA/E. Schaller et al.
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The lakes of Titan, compared to ours. Left is the largest of Titan's northern lakes, situated close to the Pole. It has a larger area than Lake Superior (right). Colors on the left picture have been artificially added to the original, black and white radar picture.
Credit: NASA/JPL/GSFC
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