Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1773212 | Icarus | 2013 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
Cassini RADAR SARtopo and altimetry data are used to construct a global gridded 1 Ã 1° elevation map, for use in Global Circulation Models, hydrological models and correlative studies. The data are sparse, and so most of the map domain (â¼90%) is populated with interpolated values using a spline algorithm. The highest (â¼+520 m) gridded point observed is at 48°S, 12°W. The lowest point observed (â¼1700 m below a 2575 km sphere) is at 59°S, 317°W: this may be a basin where liquids presently in the north could have resided in the past. If the deepest point were once a sea with the areal extent of present-day Ligeia Mare, it would be â¼1000 m deep. We find four prominent topographic rises, each â¼200 km wide, radar-bright and heavily dissected, distributed over a â¼3000 km arc in the southeastern quadrant of Titan (â¼40-60°S, 15-150°W).
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Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Space and Planetary Science
Authors
Ralph D. Lorenz, Bryan W. Stiles, Oded Aharonson, Antoine Lucas, Alexander G. Hayes, Randolph L. Kirk, Howard A. Zebker, Elizabeth P. Turtle, Catherine D. Neish, Ellen R. Stofan, Jason W. Barnes, the Cassini RADAR Team the Cassini RADAR Team,