ArXiv TLDR

Feeling the Pressure: Effects of Formation Pressure on the Physical Properties of Titan Haze Analogs

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2604.20057

Adis Husić, Xinting Yu, Ryan C. Blase, Edward L. Patrick, Eric Austin + 1 more

astro-ph.EP

TLDR

Lower formation pressure leads to denser, harder Titan haze analogs (tholins), impacting their behavior on Titan's atmosphere and surface.

Key contributions

  • Developed a new cold plasma system to generate Titan haze analogs (tholins) at varying pressures.
  • Tholins formed at lower pressure exhibited a threefold lower production rate.
  • Lower pressure tholins were significantly denser and mechanically harder than higher pressure ones.
  • Particle size, morphology, surface energy, and Young's modulus were similar across pressures.

Why it matters

This study reveals how formation pressure critically influences Titan haze properties, suggesting actual haze particles may be much denser and stronger. These findings have significant implications for understanding aerosol aggregation, transport, and surface modification processes on Titan.

Original Abstract

The Cassini-Huygens mission detected large negative ions in Titan's ionosphere at pressures as low as $10^{-6}$ torr. These ions ultimately polymerize to form Titan's complex organic haze particles, which are observed throughout the atmosphere and potentially on the surface. Laboratory analogs of these hazes, known as tholins, have been used to study Titan's aerosols; however, most are produced at much higher pressures. The influence of formation pressures on key physical properties -- such as particle size, density, surface energy, and mechanical strength -- remains poorly constrained. These properties govern the haze's aggregation efficiency, radiative behavior, and surface-atmosphere interactions, shaping Titan's climate and surface. To investigate the effects of formation pressure, we generate tholins using a newly developed cold plasma discharge system. A 95% nitrogen and 5% methane gas mixture is exposed to plasma at two pressures, 1 torr and 0.125 torr. For both samples, we measure the production rate, particle size, morphology, density, surface free energy, Young's modulus, and nanoindentation hardness. While particle size, morphology, surface energy, and Young's modulus are similar across both pressures, tholins produced at lower pressure exhibited a threefold lower production rate, but a higher density and nanoindentation hardness. These variations likely reflect pressure-dependent changes in chemical structure, porosity, and mechanical strength. Because Titan's hazes form at much lower pressures than investigated here, actual haze particles are potentially even denser and mechanically stronger than our analogs, with implications for aerosol aggregation, aeolian and fluvial transport, and surface modification on Titan.

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