D to H ratio and the origin and evolution of Titan's atmosphere
- 1 January 1986
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 319 (6052) , 388-390
- https://doi.org/10.1038/319388a0
Abstract
A value of 1.7 x 10(-3) has been reported for the ratio of CH3D to CH4 in the stratosphere of the saturnian moon Titan. A lower value of 6 x 10(-4) for this ratio in the deeper part of Titan's atmosphere was reported by de Bergh et al. For comparison we note that the CH3D to CH4 ratio on Saturn and Jupiter is 8.7 x 10(-5) and 6.7 x 10(-5), respectively. We estimate the uncertainties in all these observations and data reduction to be about a factor of 2. Despite these uncertainties it appears that Titan's atmosphere is enriched in deuterium by a factor of > or = 3 relative to Jupiter and Saturn. Potential causative factors examined here for this enrichment are condensation to form tropospheric methane clouds, fractionation occurring over a hypothetical CH4-C2H6 ocean and between the ocean and the clathrate crust beneath, fractionation which occurred during the formation of Titan and fractionation occurring as a result of the evolution of Titan's atmosphere. We conclude that the greater part of the observed fractionation is probably derived from the formation of Titan and the subsequent evolution of Titan's atmosphere driven by photochemistry.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Primordial neon, helium, and hydrogen in oceanic basaltsPublished by Elsevier ,2002
- The composition of Saturn's atmosphere at northern temperate latitudes from Voyager IRIS spectra - NH3, PH3, C2H2, C2H6, CH3D, CH4, and the Saturnian D/H isotopic ratioThe Astrophysical Journal, 1984
- Hydrogen-Deuterium Atom Abstraction from Methyl Cyanide by CF3 RadicalsBerichte der Bunsengesellschaft für physikalische Chemie, 1984
- The abundance of CH3D in the atmosphere of Titan, derived from 8- to 14-μm thermal emissionIcarus, 1982
- The tropospheric gas composition of Jupiter's north equatorial belt /NH3, PH3, CH3D, GeH4, H2O/ and the Jovian D/H isotopic ratioThe Astrophysical Journal, 1982
- Venus Was Wet: A Measurement of the Ratio of Deuterium to HydrogenScience, 1982
- Escape of Hydrogen from VenusScience, 1982
- Infrared Observations of the Saturnian System from Voyager 1Science, 1981
- Standard for Reporting Concentrations of Deuterium and Oxygen-18 in Natural WatersScience, 1961
- Vapor pressures of the methanesJournal of Research of the National Bureau of Standards, 1955