TRITON
Triton is the largest natural satellite of the planet
Neptune, and the first Neptunian moon to be discovered. It was discovered on
October 10, 1846, by English astronomer William Lassell. It is the only large
moon in the Solar System with a retrograde orbit, an orbit in the opposite
direction to its planet's rotation. At 2,710 kilometres (1,680 mi) in diameter,
it is the seventh-largest moon in the Solar System. Because of its retrograde
orbit and composition similar to Pluto's, Triton is thought to have been a
dwarf planet captured from the Kuiper belt. Triton has a surface of mostly
frozen nitrogen, a mostly water-ice crust, an icy mantle and a substantial core
of rock and metal. The core makes up two-thirds of its total mass. Triton has a
mean density of 2.061 g/cm3 and is composed of approximately 15–35% water ice.
Triton is one of the few moons in the Solar System known to
be geologically active (the others being Jupiter's Io and Saturn's Enceladus).
As a consequence, its surface is relatively young with few obvious impact
craters, and a complex geological history revealed in intricate cryovolcanic
and tectonic terrains. Part of its surface has geysers erupting sublimated
nitrogen gas, contributing to a tenuous nitrogen atmosphere less than 1/70,000
the pressure of Earth's atmosphere at sea level.
Triton was discovered by British astronomer William Lassell
on October 10, 1846, just 17 days after the discovery of Neptune.
A brewer by trade, Lassell began making mirrors for his
amateur telescope in 1820. When John Herschel received news of Neptune's
discovery, he wrote to Lassell suggesting he search for possible moons. Lassell
did so and discovered Triton eight days later. Lassell also claimed to have
discovered rings. Although Neptune was later confirmed to have rings, they are
so faint and dark that it is doubtful that he actually saw them.
Triton is named after the Greek sea god Triton (Τρίτων), the
son of Poseidon (the Greek god comparable to the Roman Neptune). The name was
first proposed by Camille Flammarion in his 1880 book Astronomie Populaire, and
was officially adopted many decades later. Until the discovery of the second
moon Nereid in 1949, Triton was commonly referred to as "the satellite of
Neptune". Lassell did not name his own discovery; he later successfully
suggested the name Hyperion, previously chosen by John Herschel, for the eighth
moon of Saturn when he discovered it.
Orbit and rotation
The orbit of Triton (red) is opposite in direction and
tilted −23° compared to a typical moon's orbit (green) in the plane of
Neptune's equator.
Triton is unique among all large moons in the Solar System
for its retrograde orbit around its planet (i.e. it orbits in a direction
opposite to the planet's rotation). Most of the outer irregular moons of
Jupiter and Saturn also have retrograde orbits, as do some of Uranus's outer moons.
However, these moons are all much more distant from their primaries, and are
small in comparison; the largest of them (Phoebe) has only 8% of the diameter
(and 0.03% of the mass) of Triton.
Triton's orbit is associated with two tilts, the inclination
of Neptune's spin to Neptune's orbit, 30°, and the inclination of Triton's
orbit to Neptune's spin, 157° (an inclination over 90° indicates retrograde
motion). Triton's orbit precesses forward relative to Neptune's spin with a
period of about 678 Earth years (4.1 Neptunian years), making its
Neptune-orbit-relative inclination vary between 127° and 180° and in the past,
to 173°. That inclination is currently 130°; Triton's orbit is now near its
maximum departure from coplanarity with Neptune's.
Triton's rotation is tidally locked to be synchronous with
its orbit around Neptune: it keeps one face oriented toward the planet at all
times. Its equator is almost exactly aligned with its orbital plane. At the
present time, Triton's rotational axis is about 40° from Neptune's orbital
plane, and hence at some point during Neptune's year each pole points fairly
close to the Sun, almost like the poles of Uranus. As Neptune orbits the Sun,
Triton's polar regions take turns facing the Sun, resulting in seasonal changes
as one pole, then the other, moves into the sunlight. Such changes were
observed in 2010.
Triton's revolution around Neptune has become a nearly
perfect circle with an eccentricity of almost zero. Viscoelastic damping from
tides alone is not thought to be capable of circularizing Triton's orbit in the
time since the origin of the system, and gas drag from a prograde debris disc
is likely to have played a substantial role. Tidal interactions also cause
Triton's orbit, which is already closer to Neptune than the Moon's is to Earth,
to gradually decay further; predictions are that 3.6 billion years from now,
Triton will pass within Neptune's Roche limit. This will result in either a
collision with Neptune's atmosphere or the breakup of Triton, forming a ring
system similar to that found around Saturn.
Capture
The Kuiper belt (green), in the Solar System's outskirts, is
where Triton is thought to have originated.
Moons in retrograde orbits cannot form in the same region of
the solar nebula as the planets they orbit, so Triton must have been captured
from elsewhere. It might therefore have originated in the Kuiper belt, a ring
of small icy objects extending outwards from just inside the orbit of Neptune
to about 50 AU from the Sun. Thought to be the point of origin for the majority
of short-period comets observed from Earth, the belt is also home to several
large, planet-like bodies including Pluto, which is now recognized as the
largest in a population of Kuiper belt objects (the plutinos) locked in orbital
step with Neptune. Triton is only slightly larger than Pluto and nearly
identical in composition, which has led to the hypothesis that the two share a
common origin.
The proposed capture of Triton may explain several features
of the Neptunian system, including the extremely eccentric orbit of Neptune's
moon Nereid and the scarcity of moons as compared to the other giant planets.
Triton's initially eccentric orbit would have intersected orbits of irregular
moons and disrupted those of smaller regular moons, dispersing them through
gravitational interactions.
Triton's eccentric post-capture orbit would have also
resulted in tidal heating of its interior, which could have kept Triton fluid
for a billion years; this inference is supported by evidence of differentiation
in Triton's interior. This source of internal heat disappeared following tidal
locking and circularization of the orbit.
Two types of mechanisms have been proposed for Triton's
capture. To be gravitationally captured by a planet, a passing body must lose
sufficient energy to be slowed down to a speed less than that required to
escape. An early theory of how Triton may have been slowed was by collision
with another object, either one that happened to be passing by Neptune (which
is unlikely), or a moon or proto-moon in orbit around Neptune (which is more
likely). A more recent hypothesis suggests that, before its capture, Triton was
part of a binary system. When this binary encountered Neptune, it interacted in
such a way that the binary dissociated, with one portion of the binary
expelled, and the other, Triton, becoming bound to Neptune. This event is more
likely for more massive companions. Similar mechanisms have been proposed for
the capture of Mars's moons. This hypothesis is supported by several lines of
evidence, including binaries being very common among the large Kuiper belt
objects. The event was brief but gentle, saving Triton from collisional
disruption. Events like this may have been common during the formation of
Neptune, or later when it migrated outward.
Physical characteristics
Triton dominates the Neptunian moon system, with over 99.5%
of its total mass. This imbalance may reflect the elimination of many of
Neptune's original satellites following Triton's capture.
Triton is the seventh-largest moon and sixteenth-largest
object in the Solar System, and is modestly larger than the dwarf planets Pluto
and Eris. It comprises more than 99.5% of all the mass known to orbit Neptune,
including the planet's rings and thirteen other known moons, and is also more
massive than all known moons in the Solar System smaller than itself combined.
Also, with a diameter 5.5% that of Neptune, it is the largest moon of a gas
giant relative to its planet in terms of diameter, although Titan is bigger
relative to Saturn in terms of mass. It has a radius, density (2.061 g/cm3),
temperature and chemical composition similar to those of Pluto.
Triton's surface is covered with a transparent layer of
annealed frozen nitrogen. Only 40% of Triton's surface has been observed and
studied, but it is possible that it is entirely covered in such a thin sheet of
nitrogen ice. Like Pluto's, Triton's crust consists of 55% nitrogen ice with
other ices mixed in. Water ice comprises 15–35% and frozen carbon dioxide (dry
ice) the remaining 10–20%. Trace ices include 0.1% methane and 0.05% carbon
monoxide. There could also be ammonia ice on the surface, as there are
indications of ammonia dihydrate in the lithosphere. Triton's mean density
implies that it probably consists of about 30–45% water ice (including
relatively small amounts of volatile ices), with the remainder being rocky
material. Triton's surface area is 23 million km2, which is 4.5% of Earth, or
15.5% of Earth's land area. Triton has a considerably and unusually high
albedo, reflecting 60–95% of the sunlight that reaches it, and it has changed
slightly since the first observations. By comparison, the Moon reflects only
11%. Triton's reddish colour is thought to be the result of methane ice, which
is converted to tholins under bombardment from ultraviolet radiation.
Because Triton's surface indicates a long history of
melting, models of its interior posit that Triton is differentiated, like
Earth, into a solid core, a mantle and a crust. Water, the most abundant
volatile in the Solar System, comprises Triton's mantle, enveloping a core of
rock and metal. There is enough rock in Triton's interior for radioactive decay
to power convection in the mantle to this day. The heat may even be sufficient
to maintain a global subsurface ocean similar to what is hypothesized to exist
beneath the surface of Europa. If liquid water is present in Triton, it has
been speculated that this could make it habitable for some form of life.
Atmosphere
Triton has a tenuous nitrogen atmosphere, with trace amounts
of carbon monoxide and small amounts of methane near its surface. Like Pluto's
atmosphere, the atmosphere of Triton is thought to have resulted from
evaporation of nitrogen from its surface. Its surface temperature is at least
35.6 K (−237.6 °C) because Triton's nitrogen ice is in the warmer, hexagonal
crystalline state, and the phase transition between hexagonal and cubic
nitrogen ice occurs at that temperature. An upper limit in the low 40s (K) can
be set from vapor pressure equilibrium with nitrogen gas in Triton's
atmosphere. This is colder than Pluto's average equilibrium temperature of 44 K
(−229 °C). Triton's surface atmospheric pressure is only about 1.4–1.9 Pa
(0.014–0.019 mbar).
Turbulence at Triton's surface creates a troposphere (a
"weather region") rising to an altitude of 8 km. Streaks on Triton's
surface left by geyser plumes suggest that the troposphere is driven by
seasonal winds capable of moving material of over a micrometre in size. Unlike
other atmospheres, Triton's lacks a stratosphere, and instead has a
thermosphere from altitudes of 8 to 950 km, and an exosphere above that. The
temperature of Triton's upper atmosphere, at 95±5 K, is higher than that at its
surface, due to heat absorbed from solar radiation and Neptune's magnetosphere.
A haze permeates most of Triton's troposphere, thought to be composed largely
of hydrocarbons and nitriles created by the action of sunlight on methane.
Triton's atmosphere also has clouds of condensed nitrogen that lie between 1
and 3 km from its surface.
In 1997, observations from Earth were made of Triton's limb
as it passed in front of stars. These observations indicated the presence of a
denser atmosphere than was deduced from Voyager 2 data. Other observations have
shown an increase in temperature by 5% from 1989 to 1998. These observations
indicate Triton is approaching an unusually warm summer season that happens
only once every few hundred years. Theories for this warming include a change
of frost patterns on Triton's surface and a change in ice albedo, which would
allow more heat to be absorbed. Another theory argues the changes in
temperature are a result of deposition of dark, red material from geological
processes. Because Triton's Bond albedo is among the highest within the Solar
System, it is sensitive to small variations in spectral albedo.
Surface features
All detailed knowledge of the surface of Triton was acquired
from a distance of 40,000 km by the Voyager 2 spacecraft during a single
encounter in 1989. The 40% of Triton's surface imaged by Voyager 2 revealed
blocky outcrops, ridges, troughs, furrows, hollows, plateaus, icy plains and
few craters. Triton is relatively flat; its observed topography never varies
beyond a kilometer. There are relatively few impact craters on Triton. Recent
analysis of crater density and distribution has suggested that in geological
terms, Triton's surface is extremely young, with regions varying from an
estimated 50 million years old to just an estimated 6 million years old. 55% of
Triton's surface is covered with frozen nitrogen, with water ice comprising
15–35% and dry ice (aka. frozen carbon dioxide) forming the remaining 10–20%.
The surface shows deposits of tholins, organic compounds that may be precursor
chemicals to the origin of life.
Cryovolcanism
Triton is geologically active; its surface is young and has
relatively few impact craters. Although Triton's crust is made of various ices,
its subsurface processes are similar to those that produce volcanoes and rift
valleys on Earth, but with water and ammonia as opposed to liquid rock.
Triton's entire surface is cut by complex valleys and ridges, probably the
result of tectonics and icy volcanism. The vast majority of surface features on
Triton are endogenic—the result of internal geological processes rather than
external processes such as impacts. Most are volcanic and extrusive in nature,
rather than tectonic.
The Voyager 2 probe observed in 1989 a handful of
geyser-like eruptions of invisible nitrogen gas and entrained dust from beneath
the surface of Triton in plumes up to 8 km high. Triton is thus, along with
Earth, Io, and Enceladus, one of the few bodies in the Solar System on which
active eruptions of some sort have been observed. The best-observed examples
are named Hili and Mahilani (after a Zulu water sprite and a Tongan sea spirit,
respectively).
All the geysers observed were located between 50° and 57°S,
the part of Triton's surface close to the subsolar point. This indicates that
solar heating, although very weak at Triton's great distance from the Sun,
plays a crucial role. It is thought that the surface of Triton probably
consists of a translucent layer of frozen nitrogen overlying a darker
substrate, which creates a kind of "solid greenhouse effect". Solar
radiation passes through the thin surface ice sheet, slowly heating and
vaporizing subsurface nitrogen until enough gas pressure accumulates for it to
erupt through the crust. A temperature increase of just 4 K above the ambient
surface temperature of 37 K could drive eruptions to the heights observed.
Although commonly termed "cryovolcanic", this nitrogen plume activity
is distinct from Triton's larger scale cryovolcanic eruptions, as well as
volcanic processes on other worlds, which are powered by the internal heat of
the body in question. Analogous CO2 geysers on Mars are thought to erupt from
its south polar cap each spring.
Each eruption of a Triton geyser may last up to a year,
driven by the sublimation of about 100 million cubic metres (3.5×109 cu ft) of
nitrogen ice over this interval; dust entrained may be deposited up to 150 km
downwind in visible streaks, and perhaps much farther in more diffuse deposits.
Voyager 2's images of Triton's southern hemisphere show many such streaks of
dark material. Between 1977 and the Voyager 2 flyby in 1989, Triton shifted
from a reddish colour, similar to Pluto, to a far paler hue, suggesting that
lighter nitrogen frosts had covered older reddish material. The eruption of
volatiles from Triton's equator and their deposition at the poles may
redistribute enough mass over the course of 10,000 years to cause polar wander.
Polar cap, plains and ridges
Triton's south polar region is covered by a highly
reflective cap of frozen nitrogen and methane sprinkled by impact craters and
openings of geysers. Little is known about the north pole because it was on the
night side during the Voyager 2 encounter, but it is thought that Triton must
also have a north polar ice cap.
The high plains found on Triton's eastern hemisphere, such
as Cipango Planum, cover over and blot out older features, and are therefore
almost certainly the result of icy lava washing over the previous landscape.
The plains are dotted with pits, such as Leviathan Patera, which are probably
the vents from which this lava emerged. The composition of the lava is unknown,
although a mixture of ammonia and water is suspected.
Four roughly circular "walled plains" have been
identified on Triton. They are the flattest regions so far discovered, with a
variance in altitude of less than 200 m. They are thought to have formed from
eruption of icy lava. The plains near Triton's eastern limb are dotted with
black spots, the maculae. Some maculae are simple dark spots with diffuse
boundaries, and others comprise a dark central patch surrounded by a white halo
with sharp boundaries. The maculae typically have diameters of about 100 km and
widths of the halos of between 20 and 30 km.
There are extensive ridges and valleys in complex patterns
across Triton's surface, probably the result of freeze–thaw cycles. Many also
appear to be tectonic in nature and may result from extension or strike-slip
faulting. There are long double ridges of ice with central troughs bearing a
strong resemblance to Europan lineae (although they have a larger scale), and
which may have a similar origin, possibly shear heating from strike-slip motion
along faults caused by diurnal tidal stresses experienced before Triton's orbit
was fully circularized. These faults with parallel ridges expelled from the
interior cross complex terrain with valleys in the equatorial region. The
ridges and furrows, or sulci, such as Yasu Sulci, Ho Sulci, and Lo Sulci, are
thought to be of intermediate age in Triton's geological history, and in many
cases to have formed concurrently. They tend to be clustered in groups or
"packets".
Cantaloupe terrain
Triton's western hemisphere consists of a strange series of
fissures and depressions known as "cantaloupe terrain" because of its
resemblance to the skin of a cantaloupe melon. Although it has few craters, it
is thought that this is the oldest terrain on Triton. It probably covers much
of Triton's western half.
Cantaloupe terrain, which is mostly dirty water ice, is only
known to exist on Triton. It contains depressions 30–40 km in diameter. The
depressions (cavi) are probably not impact craters because they are all of
similar size and have smooth curves. The leading hypothesis for their formation
is diapirism, the rising of "lumps" of less dense material through a
stratum of denser material. Alternative hypotheses include formation by
collapses, or by flooding caused by cryovolcanism.
Impact craters
Due to constant erasure and modification by ongoing
geological activity, impact craters on Triton's surface are relatively rare. A
census of Triton's craters imaged by Voyager 2 found only 179 that were
incontestably of impact origin, compared with 835 observed for Uranus's moon
Miranda, which has only three percent of Triton's surface area. The largest
crater observed on Triton thought to have been created by an impact is a 27
km-diameter feature called Mazomba. Although larger craters have been observed,
they are generally thought to be volcanic in nature.
The few impact craters on Triton are almost all concentrated
in the leading hemisphere—that facing the direction of the orbital motion—with
the majority concentrated around the equator between 30° and 70° longitude,
resulting from material swept up from orbit around Neptune. Because it orbits
with one side permanently facing the planet, astronomers expect that Triton
should have fewer impacts on its trailing hemisphere, due to impacts on the
leading hemisphere being more frequent and more violent. Voyager 2 imaged only
40% of Triton's surface, so this remains uncertain.
Observation and exploration
The orbital properties of Triton were already determined
with high accuacy in the 19th century. It was found to have a retrograde
orbit, at a very high angle of inclination to the plane of Neptune's orbit. The
first detailed observations of Triton were not made until 1930. Little was
known about the satellite until Voyager 2 arrived in 1989.
Before the arrival of Voyager 2, astronomers suspected that
Triton might have liquid nitrogen seas and a nitrogen/methane atmosphere with a
density as much as 30% that of Earth. Like the famous overestimates of the
atmospheric density of Mars, this proved completely false. As with Mars, a
denser atmosphere is postulated for its early history.
The first attempt to measure the diameter of Triton was made
by Gerard Kuiper in 1954. He obtained a value of 3,800 km. Subsequent
measurement attempts arrived at values ranging from 2,500 to 6,000 km, or from
slightly smaller than the Moon (3474.2 km) to nearly half the diameter of
Earth. Data from the approach of Voyager 2 to Neptune on August 25, 1989, led
to a more accurate estimate of Triton's diameter (2,706 km).
In the 1990s, various observations from Earth were made of
the limb of Triton using the occultation of nearby stars, which indicated the
presence of an atmosphere and an exotic surface. Observations in late 1997
suggests that Triton is heating up and the atmosphere has become significantly
denser than when Voyager 2 flew past in 1989.
New concepts for missions to the Neptune system to be
conducted in the 2010s have been brought forward by NASA scientists on numerous
occasions over the last decades. All of them identified Triton as being a prime
target and a separate Triton lander comparable to the Huygens probe for Titan
was frequently included in those plans. No efforts aimed at Neptune and Triton
went beyond the proposal phase and NASA's funding on missions to the outer
Solar System is currently focused on the Jupiter and Saturn systems.
A proposed lander mission to Triton, called Triton Hopper,
would mine and process nitrogen ice from the surface of Triton and process it
to be used as small rocket propellant and fly or 'hop' across the surface.
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