Titan's atmosphere and dense smog have kept scientists guessing about what is going on below. Astrophysicist Claire Max of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory recently used the giant Keck I telescope in Hawaii to examine Titan in infrared light, which can pierce the global haze. She and her colleagues then took a series of high-speed snapshots to freeze the blurring caused by atmospheric turbulence, and combined them into a single, sharp image. The new picture shows Titan seemingly divided into bright continents and dark oceans.
Titan's seas probably consist of methane or ethane mixed with more complex organic molecules-liquid natural gas combined with tar, basically. The Cassini spacecraft, now bound for Saturn, will drop a probe through Titan's clouds in 2004 for a firsthand look. Meanwhile, Max plans to use the Keck telescope to make a crude map of Titan's composition. "With a probe, you get lots and lots of data about just one place," Max says. "We hope to survey the entire surface."


