Titan's Surface, Revealed by HST Imaging
P H Smith, M T Lemmon, R D Lorenz, L A Sromovsky, J J Caldwell, and M D Allison
Submitted for publication
We present for the first time relative albedo maps of Titan's surface. The maps were made from
images taken by the Hubble Space Telescope's Planetary Camera (295 km per pixel) through
atmospheric windows at 940 and 1080 nm. Coverage at all longitudes and between 45 deg S and
60 deg N was obtained with 14 visits from 4 to 18 October 1994. Each image is characterized by
haze with both limb effects (brightening) and a large north-south contrast. Subtracting an
averaged image from each frame removes haze effects and reveals surface features of ~10%
maximum contrast. Many features are clearly visible in multiple images and in both filters, but
the surface map is dominated by a large, bright, roughly rectangular feature centered at 110 deg W,
10 deg S and elongated in an east-west direction (4000x2500 km2): this feature and others indicate
the diversity of Titan's surface . We consider the origin of the bright feature in an otherwise
dark landscape and suggest that highland washing by methane rainfall is a likely mechanism.
Titan
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