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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(29): e2206837120, 2023 Jul 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37428909

RESUMO

Alluvial rivers are conveyor belts of fluid and sediment that provide a record of upstream climate and erosion on Earth, Titan, and Mars. However, many of Earth's rivers remain unsurveyed, Titan's rivers are not well resolved by current spacecraft data, and Mars' rivers are no longer active, hindering reconstructions of planetary surface conditions. To overcome these problems, we use dimensionless hydraulic geometry relations-scaling laws that relate river channel dimensions to flow and sediment transport rates-to calculate in-channel conditions using only remote sensing measurements of channel width and slope. On Earth, this offers a way to predict flow and sediment flux in rivers that lack field measurements and shows that the distinct dynamics of bedload-dominated, suspended load-dominated, and bedrock rivers give rise to distinct channel characteristics. On Mars, this approach not only predicts grain sizes at Gale Crater and Jezero Crater that overlap with those measured by the Curiosity and Perseverance rovers, it enables reconstructions of past flow conditions that are consistent with proposed long-lived hydrologic activity at both craters. On Titan, our predicted sediment fluxes to the coast of Ontario Lacus could build the lake's river delta in as little as ~1,000 y, and our scaling relationships suggest that Titan's rivers may be wider, slope more gently, and transport sediment at lower flows than rivers on Earth or Mars. Our approach provides a template for predicting channel properties remotely for alluvial rivers across Earth, along with interpreting spacecraft observations of rivers on Titan and Mars.

2.
Geophys Res Lett ; 48(18)2021 Sep 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34776555

RESUMO

One of the first large cloud systems ever observed on Titan was a stationary event at the southern pole that lasted almost two full Titan days. Its stationary nature and large extent are puzzling given that low-level winds should transport clouds eastward, pointing to a mechanism such as atmospheric waves propagating against the mean flow. We use a composite of 47 large convective events across 15 Titan years of simulations from the Titan Atmospheric Model to show that Rossby waves trigger polar convection-which halts the waves and produces stationary precipitation-and then communicate its impact globally. In the aftermath of the convection, forced waves undergo a complicated evolution, including cross-equatorial propagation and tropical-extratropical interaction. The resulting global impact from convection implies its detectability anywhere on Titan, both via surface measurements of pressure and temperature and through remote observation of the outgoing longwave radiation, which increases by ~0.5% globally.

3.
Nature ; 486(7402): 237-9, 2012 Jun 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22699614

RESUMO

Titan has clouds, rain and lakes--like Earth--but composed of methane rather than water. Unlike Earth, most of the condensable methane (the equivalent of 5 m depth globally averaged) lies in the atmosphere. Liquid detected on the surface (about 2 m deep) has been found by radar images only poleward of 50° latitude, while dune fields pervade the tropics. General circulation models explain this dichotomy, predicting that methane efficiently migrates to the poles from these lower latitudes. Here we report an analysis of near-infrared spectral images of the region between 20° N and 20° S latitude. The data reveal that the lowest fluxes in seven wavelength bands that probe Titan's surface occur in an oval region of about 60 × 40 km(2), which has been observed repeatedly since 2004. Radiative transfer analyses demonstrate that the resulting spectrum is consistent with a black surface, indicative of liquid methane on the surface. Enduring low-latitude lakes are best explained as supplied by subterranean sources (within the last 10,000 years), which may be responsible for Titan's methane, the continual photochemical depletion of which furnishes Titan's organic chemistry.

4.
Sci Adv ; 9(46): eadj2225, 2023 Nov 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37976349

RESUMO

Atmospheric rivers (ARs) bring concentrated rainfall and flooding to the western United States (US) and are hypothesized to have supported sustained hydroclimatic changes in the past. However, their ephemeral nature makes it challenging to document ARs in climate models and estimate their contribution to hydroclimate changes recorded by time-averaged paleoclimate archives. We present new climate model simulations of Heinrich Stadial 1 (HS1; 16,000 years before the present), an interval characterized by widespread wetness in the western US, that demonstrate increased AR frequency and winter precipitation sourced from the southeastern North Pacific. These changes are amplified with freshwater fluxes into the North Atlantic, indicating that North Atlantic cooling associated with weakened Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) is a key driver of HS1 climate in this region. As recent observations suggest potential weakening of AMOC, our identified connection between North Atlantic climate and northeast Pacific AR activity has implications for future western US hydroclimate.

5.
Icarus ; 3732022 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34916707

RESUMO

The impact of methane convection on the circulation of Titan is investigated in the Titan Atmospheric Model (TAM), using a simplified Betts-Miller (SBM) moist convection parameterization scheme. We vary the reference relative humidity (RHSBM ) and relaxation timescale of convection (τ) parameters of the SBM scheme. Titan's atmosphere is mostly insensitive to changes in τ, but convective instability and precipitation are highly impacted by changes in RHSBM . Convection changes behavior from occurring in infrequent (<1 per Titan year), intense events at summer solstice that quickly encompass the entire globe at low RHSBM to near-continuous precipitation at the poles during summer at high RHSBM (>85%). The intermediate regime (RHSBM =70-80%) consists of frequent events (~10 per Titan year) of moderate intensity that are limited in meridional extent to their respective hemisphere. Using results from the Titan Regional Atmospheric Modeling System (TRAMS) and observations, we tune the parameters of the SBM parameterization with optimum values of RH=80% and τ=28800 s. We present a simulated decadal climatology that qualitatively matches observations of Titan's humidity and cloud activity and generally resembles previous results with TAM. Comparing this simulation to one without moist convection demonstrates that convection strengthens the meridional circulation, warms the mid-levels and cools the surface at the poles, and magnifies zonal-mean global moisture anomalies.

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