Researchers compared the chemical composition of Titan's atmosphere with parameters predicted by a mathematical model.
The atmosphere of Titan was described by a model that took into account the presence of 83 neutral molecules and 33 ions and 420 different chemical reactions between them.
Despite the fact that Titan is located much further from the Sun than the Earth and that radiation flux coming from the Sun to the moon is 100 times less, the intensity of UV rays is enough to spur photochemical reactions in the upper layers of Titan's atmosphere.
It was equipped with a number of gauges, including ultraviolet and infrared spectrometers and equipment for studying the ions that were drawn into space.
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Within ten years in Saturn's orbit, a plasma complex and a mass spectrometer designed specifically for this research project gathered enough data to compare it with mathematical models.
In addition to Cassini, part of the data was obtained using the IRAM ground submillimetre telescope and the Hershel infrared space observatory.
Comparing this data with the previously developed model, Professor Vladimir Krasnopolsky, from the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology (MIPT), showed that the theoretical description of Titan's atmosphere matches the reality quite accurately.
There are discrepancies, however, but they are caused by inevitable measurement errors - so far the concentrations of many substances are approximate.
The most important thing is not the absolute matching of specific parameters but the correctness of the general model of chemical processes.
The research was published in the journal Icarus.