Abstract

Using images from Cassini, we analyzed the north–south albedo asymmetry that has been observed in the atmosphere of Saturn’s moon, Titan. Suitable images from the Cassini Imaging Science Subsystem taken at 889 nm spanned from 2004 to 2017—around half of a Titan year—and revealed seasonal changes in the characteristics and orientation of the north–south asymmetry boundary. Such circumglobal features provide insight into the dynamics and circulation of the atmosphere more broadly. The albedo asymmetry has been observed to reverse for part of the Titan year, inverting the brighter and darker hemispheres; we also observed this inversion, along with the formation of additional banding briefly during the transition (around 2014–2016). A tilt in the rotation axis of Titan’s atmosphere with respect to the solid body rotation has previously been noted. Using robust edge-detection techniques, we likewise identified a tilt offset of a few degrees in the albedo transition boundaries. The azimuth of this tilt axis remained roughly fixed in inertial space, with some smaller possible seasonal fluctuations around the fixed direction noted.

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