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We report the detection of a spectral signature observed at 682 cm$^{-1}$ by the Cassini Composite Infrared Spectrometer (CIRS) in nadir and limb geometry observations of Titans southern stratospheric polar region in the middle of southern fall, while stratospheric temperatures are the coldest since the beginning of the Cassini mission. The 682 cm$^{-1}$ signature, which is only observed below an altitude of 300-km, is at least partly attributed to the benzene (C$_6$H$_6$) ice $ u_{4}$ C-H bending mode. While we first observed it in CIRS nadir spectra of the southern polar region in early 2013, we focus here on the study of nadir data acquired in May 2013, which have a more favorable observation geometry. We derived the C$_6$H$_6$ ice mass mixing ratio in 5{deg}S latitude bins from the south pole to 65{deg}S and infer the C$_6$H$_6$ cloud top altitude to be located deeper with increasing distance from the pole. We additionally analyzed limb data acquired in March 2015, which were the first limb dataset available after the May 2013 nadir observation, in order to infer a vertical profile of its mass mixing ratio in the 0.1 - 1 mbar region (250 - 170 km). We derive an upper limit of $sim$1.5 $mu$m for the equivalent radius of pure C$_6$H$_6$ ice particles from the shape of the observed emission band. Several other unidentified signatures are observed near 687 and 702 cm$^{-1}$ and possibly 695 cm$^{-1}$, which could also be due to ice spectral signatures as they are observed in the deep stratosphere at pressure levels similar to the C$_6$H$_6$ ice ones. We could not reproduce these signatures with pure nitrile ice (HCN, HC$_3$N,CH$_3$CN, C$_2$H$_5$CN and C$_2$N$_2$) spectra available in the literature except the 695 cm$^{-1}$ feature that could possibly be due to C$_2$H$_3$CN ice.
In this paper we select large spectral averages of data from the Cassini Composite Infrared Spectrometer (CIRS) obtained in limb-viewing mode at low latitudes (30S--30N), greatly increasing the path length and hence signal-to-noise ratio for opticall
The magnetospheric cusps are important sites of the coupling of a magnetosphere with the solar wind. The combination of both ground- and space-based observations at Earth have enabled considerable progress to be made in understanding the terrestrial
We have searched for the presence of simple P and S-bearing molecules in Titans atmosphere, by looking for the characteristic signatures of phosphine and hydrogen sulfide in infrared spectra obtained by Cassini CIRS. As a result we have placed the fi
We used 0.85 - 5.1 micron 2006 observations by Cassinis Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS) to constrain the unusual vertical structure and compositions of cloud layers in Saturns south polar region, the site of a powerful vortex circulat
From 2004 to 2017, the Cassini spacecraft orbited Saturn, completing 127 close flybys of its largest moon, Titan. Cassinis Composite Infrared Spectrometer (CIRS), one of 12 instruments carried on board, profiled Titan in the thermal infrared (7-1000