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By Dr David Whitehouse
BBC News Online science editor
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What lurks beneath the clouds?
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Titan - Saturn's major moon - may have a surface of oily lakes or oceans, according to the latest radar research.
The giant Arecibo radio telescope in Puerto Rico has transmitted a beam of radio waves towards Titan, and detected a faint echo over two hours later.
Analysis of the dim signal suggests the presence of craters filled with oily oceans or lakes beneath the clouds.
In January 2005 a European Space Agency probe - Huygens - will parachute on to Titan's surface to see what is there.
Down to a sunless sea
Titan is one of the most intriguing and significant bodies in the Solar System.
Arecibo sent out the signals
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Optical observations cannot see through the photochemical smog that shrouds the world, but infrared and radar radiation can get through, revealing a varied surface beneath the clouds.
Ground-based telescopes and the Hubble Space Telescope have produced coarse maps of the surface, showing what could be a continent of rock and ice surrounded by hydrocarbon seas or lakes.
Hydrocarbons - methane and ethane - could form oily oceans on the surface - whose waves lap against shorelines of ice stained by hydrocarbon drizzle from the sky.
The Arecibo signals took 2 hours and 15 minutes to return. A tiny fraction of the transmitted energy was detected at Arecibo as well as at the Green Bank radio telescope in the US.
Will it splash down?
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As expected, the echo contained a broad diffuse component. In most cases it also had a sharper signal just like that expected from a broad flat region like the surface of an ocean.
Confirmation will come next year when the Cassini space probe reaches the Saturnian system and begins a series of close flybys of Titan.
In January 2005 Cassini will drop the Huygens probe on to Titan, which may land with quite a splash.