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The Cassini-Huygens mission measured the chemical abundances of the major components of Titans atmosphere, and analyses of the data revealed several as-yet unexplained anomalies in the methane and hydrogen profiles. We model the deceleration and ablation of meteors in Titans atmosphere to examine whether meteor energy deposition could explain, in part, two of these anomalies. Our simulations vary meteor entry mass, trajectory angle, and velocity, and follow changes in all three as our meteors descend into a realistic Titan atmosphere. For the smallest particles, which deliver the most mass and therefore energy to Titan, we find that the altitudes where energy deposition peaks correspond to those of the observed chemical anomalies. In the region directly above the anomalies, energy deposition by meteors is greater than energy deposition from ultraviolet photons, which are typically responsible for methane dissociation. Finally, we calculate the total amount of energy available for chemical reactions in question. Total meteor energy deposited is swamped by daytime ultraviolet light, but of course is the dominant source of energy for atmospheric chemistry at the relevant altitudes during the night.
Titan harbors a dense, organic-rich atmosphere primarily composed of N$_2$ and CH$_4$, with lesser amounts of hydrocarbons and nitrogen-bearing species. As a result of high sensitivity observations by the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array
Vinyl cyanide (C$_2$H$_3$CN) is theorized to form in Titans atmosphere via high-altitude photochemistry and is of interest regarding the astrobiology of cold planetary surfaces due to its predicted ability to form cell membrane-like structures (azoto
Simulations of Titans atmospheric transmission and surface reflectivity have been developed in order to estimate how Titans atmosphere and surface properties could affect performances of the Cassini radar experiment. In this paper we present a select
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
Simulation results are presented from a new general circulation model (GCM) of Titan, the Titan Atmospheric Model (TAM), which couples the Flexible Modeling System (FMS) spectral dynamical core to a suite of external/sub-grid-scale physics. These inc