PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

MIPT-based researcher models Titan's atmosphere

Professor Vladimir Krasnopolsky from Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology offered a reliable mathematical model of Titan's atmosphere

2014-07-23
(Press-News.org) A researcher from Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, Prof. Vladimir Krasnopolsky, who heads the Laboratory of High Resolution Infrared Spectroscopy of Planetary Atmospheres, has published the results of the comparison of his model of Titan's atmosphere with the latest data.

The article in the journal Icarus compares the chemical composition of Titan's atmosphere with parameters predicted by a mathematical model. The atmosphere of Saturn's largest moon was described by a model that took into account the presence of 83 neutral molecules and33 ions and420 different chemical reactions between them. Despite the fact that Titan is located much further from the Sun than the Earth and that radiation flux coming from the Sun to the moon is 100 times less, the intensity of UV rays is enough to spur photochemical reactions in the upper layers of Titan's atmosphere.

The data regarding the composition of Titan's atmosphere, which is 1.6 times denser near the surface than the Earth's air, was obtained from several sources, the main of which was the Cassini orbiter. It was equipped with a number of gauges, including ultraviolet and infrared spectrometers and equipment for studying the ions that were drawn into space. Within ten years in Saturn's orbit, a plasma complex and a mass spectrometer designed specifically for this research project gathered enough data to compare it with mathematical models.

In addition to Cassini, part of the data was obtained using the IRAM ground submillimeter telescope and the Hershel infrared space observatory. Data onthe distribution of aerosol particles in Titan's atmosphere was received from a unique space capsule, Huygens, which landed on Titan for the first time in the history of mankind and sent the first photos of its surface.

Comparing this data with the previously developed model, Krasnopolsky showed that the theoretical description of Titan's atmosphere matches the reality quite accurately. There are discrepancies, however, but they are caused by inevitable measurement errors – so far the concentrations of many substances are approximate. The most important thing is not the absolute matching of specific parameters but the correctness of the general model of chemical processes.

"The coherence of the model with reality means that we can correctly tell where different substances go from Titan's ionosphere and where they come from," Krasnopolsky said.

Krasnopolsky is considered a leading global expert on the atmosphere of celestial bodies of the solar system. He has participated in the creation of spectrometers for a variety of spacecraft, including the legendary Voyagers and the first Soviet interplanetary probes.

INFORMATION: MIPT's press office would like to thank Prof. Krasnopolsky for his assistance in writing this article.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Vanderbilt-led study identifies genes linked to breast cancer in East Asian women

2014-07-23
A new study in East Asian women has identified three genetic changes linked to an increased risk of breast cancer. The research, led by Vanderbilt University investigators, was published online July 20 in Nature Genetics. While breast cancer is one of the most common malignancies among women worldwide, most studies of the genetic risk factors for the disease have focused on women of European ancestry. Given the differences in genetic heritage and environmental exposures between East Asian women and those of European ancestry, the investigators decided to conduct a study ...

Scientists find way to maintain quantum entanglement in amplified signals

Scientists find way to maintain quantum entanglement in amplified signals
2014-07-23
Physicists Sergei Filippov (MIPT and Russian Quantum Center at Skolkovo) and Mario Ziman (Masaryk University in Brno, Czech Republic, and the Institute of Physics in Bratislava, Slovakia) have found a way to preserve quantum entanglement of particles passing through an amplifier and, conversely, when transmitting a signal over long distances. Details are provided in an article published in the journal Physical Review A (see preprint). Quantum entangled particles are considered to be the basis of several promising technologies, including quantum computers and communication ...

Obesity linked to low endurance, increased fatigue in the workplace

2014-07-23
FALLS CHURCH, Va. -- U.S. workplaces may need to consider innovative methods to prevent fatigue from developing in employees who are obese. Based on results from a new study published in the Journal of Occupational and Environmental Hygiene (JOEH), workers who are obese may have significantly shorter endurance times when performing workplace tasks, compared with their non-obese counterparts. The study, conducted at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, Va., examined the endurance of 32 individuals in four categories (non-obese young, obese young, non-obese older, and obese older) ...

The electric slide dance of DNA knots

The electric slide dance of DNA knots
2014-07-23
DNA has the nasty habit of getting tangled and forming knots. Scientists study these knots to understand their function and learn how to disentangle them (e.g. useful for gene sequencing techniques). Cristian Micheletti, professor at the International School for Advanced Studies (SISSA) in Trieste and his team have been carrying out research in which they simulate these knots and their dynamics. In their latest paper, just published in the journal Soft Matter, Micheletti together with Marco Di Stefano, first author and PhD student at SISSA, and colleagues from Ljubljana ...

Ancient genetic material from caries bacterium obtained for the first time

Ancient genetic material from caries bacterium obtained for the first time
2014-07-23
Streptococcus mutans, one of the principal bacteria that cause dental caries, has increased the change in its genetic material over time, possibly coinciding with dietary change linked to the expansion of humanity. This is highlighted in a study by researchers from the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (UAB) and the Laboratorio Nacional de Genómica para la Biodiversidad (National Laboratory of Genomics for Biodiversity) in Mexico who, for the first time, have sequenced genetic material from this bacterium in populations from the past. Increase in genetic diversity has ...

Linking television and the Internet

Linking television and the Internet
2014-07-23
The panel discussion is getting heated -- but what exactly is in the new proposed law that the experts on TV are arguing about so vigorously? Up until now, spontaneous questions such as these that arise during a program had to be clarified through a viewer's own research on the Internet. If it's up to researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute for Intelligent Analysis and Information Systems IAIS in Sankt Augustin, Germany, viewers will no longer have to look up such additional information in the future. In the project "LinkedTV", the institute is working with eleven partners ...

Bats use the evening sky's polarization pattern for orientation

Bats use the evening skys polarization pattern for orientation
2014-07-23
This news release is available in German. Animals can use varying sensory modalities for orientation, some of which might be very different from ours. Some bird species for example take the polarization pattern produced by sunlight in the atmosphere to calibrate their orientation systems. Now researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology in Seewiesen, Germany, and Queen's University Belfast have discovered with colleagues from Israel that a night active mammal, the greater mouse-eared bat, has the capability to orient using polarized light. These bats ...

Rising temperatures hinder Indian wheat production

Rising temperatures hinder Indian wheat production
2014-07-23
Geographers at the University of Southampton have found a link between increasing average temperatures in India and a reduction in wheat production. Researchers Dr John Duncan, Dr Jadu Dash and Professor Pete Atkinson have shown that recent warmer temperatures in the country's major wheat belt are having a negative effect on crop yield. More specifically, they found a rise in nighttime temperatures is having the most impact. Dr Jadu Dash comments: "Our findings highlight the vulnerability of India's wheat production system to temperature rise, which is predicted to ...

A crystal wedding in the nanocosmos

A crystal wedding in the nanocosmos
2014-07-23
Researchers at the Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf (HZDR), the Vienna University of Technology and the Maria Curie-Skłodowska University Lublin have succeeded in embedding nearly perfect semiconductor crystals into a silicon nanowire. With this new method of producing hybrid nanowires, very fast and multi-functional processing units can be accommodated on a single chip in the future. The research results will be published in the journal Nano Research. Nano-optoelectronics are considered the cornerstone of future chip technology, but the research faces major ...

Intestinal parasites are 'old friends,' researchers argue

2014-07-23
Intestinal parasites such as tapeworms, hookworms and a protist called Blastocystis can be beneficial to human health, according to a new paper that argues we should rethink our views of organisms that live off the human body. To prove the point, paper co-author Julius Lukeš even ingested three developmental stages of a large species of tapeworm called Diphyllobothrium latum. After more than a year with the tapeworms, which might have grown to be as long as four metres each by now, he says he feels fine. "I knew there was no risk," he says. Lukeš, a senior fellow ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Online ‘addiction’ + not enough sleep or exercise linked to teen school absence risk

Working arrangements for locum doctors pose significant patient safety challenges

Age-related and contractual factors stronger drivers of NHS clinical staff retention than organizational ones

Cold coulomb crystals, cosmic clues: Unraveling the mysteries of space chemistry

Most female athletes support categorization by biological sex, research shows

Study reveals how humanity could unite to address global challenges

Following cellular lineage

Alzheimer’s disease progresses faster in people with Down syndrome

Gender stereotypes in schools impact on girls and boys with mental health difficulties, study finds

Searching ICTRP: Dispensable for drug assessments, but essential for assess-ments of non-drug interventions

HIV epidemic cannot be ended without stopping former prisoners and other patients being lost to care

Nanoparticle delivery of FZD4 to lung endothelial cells inhibits lung cancer progression and metastases

Pioneering study targets Alzheimer's disease risk factors among Californians from the Middle East and North Africa

CO2 worsens wildfires by helping plants grow

University of Exeter to lead groundbreaking international cyber law project

Huge database gives insight into salmon patterns at sea

Fires pose growing worldwide threat to wildland-urban interface

Water main breaks are rarely due to a single factor, new Concordia research finds

MSU research suggests darker side of being politically confident

New findings in JNCCN illustrate pathway for screening high-risk individuals for pancreatic cancer in PRECEDE study

What’s behind canned wine’s rotten egg smell? Cornell team IDs the culprit

Using generative AI, Insilico Medicine discovers new class of Polθ Inhibitors for BRCA-deficient cancers

New A.I. project will allow industrial robots to be more freethinking

Computer scientist William Wang receives prestigious early career technical achievement award

UC Irvine researchers shine light on rapid changes in Arctic and boreal ecosystems

Trash to treasure – researchers turn metal waste into catalyst for hydrogen

Microplastics, algal blooms, seafood safety are public health concerns addressed by new Oceans and Human Health Centers

Alba Yerro-Colom to use National Science Foundation CAREER award to better predict and prevent landslides

Researchers discover urine-based test to detect head and neck cancer

Moffitt treats first clinical trial patient with gamma delta CAR T for bone metastatic prostate cancer

[Press-News.org] MIPT-based researcher models Titan's atmosphere
Professor Vladimir Krasnopolsky from Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology offered a reliable mathematical model of Titan's atmosphere