Titan - Exposed to large amounts of Oxygen

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Titan's atmosphere is primarily nitrogen, with rivers of liquid methane, which prevents instability due to the lack of oxygen. The potential impact of an oxygen-rich asteroid could theoretically ignite methane and alter Titan's structure, but the conditions for free oxygen to exist in cryogenic environments are rare. Frozen forms of CO2 and H2O present on Titan are less reactive, limiting their ability to ignite methane. Edward Drobyshevski's theory suggests that solar-induced currents could electrolyze ice into free oxygen and hydrogen, potentially leading to explosive reactions, though this idea lacks widespread support among researchers. Overall, while impacts could change Titan significantly, the likelihood of oxygen-induced ignition remains low.
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Titan has rivers of liquid methane creeping in an atmosphere of mostly nitrogen. The lack of oxygen prevents the planet from being ridiculously unstable. Here’s my question -- If an asteroid rich in oxygen (or H2O) crashes into Titan, could the oxygen present in the projectile be enough to ignite a significant portion of the surface methane, enough to fundamentally change the physical structure of Titan?
 
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Sure. But even if Titan had no atmosphere, a big enough impact could "fundamentally change the physical structure of Titan".
 
skycastlefish said:
Titan has rivers of liquid methane creeping in an atmosphere of mostly nitrogen. The lack of oxygen prevents the planet from being ridiculously unstable.

That and the cold. There is a lot of oxygen present in the form of frozen CO2 and H2O, but being frozen makes it rather less reactive.

Here’s my question -- If an asteroid rich in oxygen (or H2O) crashes into Titan, could the oxygen present in the projectile be enough to ignite a significant portion of the surface methane, enough to fundamentally change the physical structure of Titan?

Well H2O won't ignite methane. And free oxygen doesn't typically exist in nature in cryogenic conditions i.e. in any asteroid likely to hit Titan. Edward Drobyshevski has proposed, for the last 30 years, that induced currents from moving magnetic fields (i.e. the Solar Wind) could cause ice to become electrolysed into free oxygen and hydrogen, slowly building up to explosive levels because they're trapped in the ice. Not too many other researchers think that likely, but it'd make a helluva bang!
 
Interesting... thanks a lot!
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recombination_(cosmology) Was a matter density right after the decoupling low enough to consider the vacuum as the actual vacuum, and not the medium through which the light propagates with the speed lower than ##({\epsilon_0\mu_0})^{-1/2}##? I'm asking this in context of the calculation of the observable universe radius, where the time integral of the inverse of the scale factor is multiplied by the constant speed of light ##c##.
Why was the Hubble constant assumed to be decreasing and slowing down (decelerating) the expansion rate of the Universe, while at the same time Dark Energy is presumably accelerating the expansion? And to thicken the plot. recent news from NASA indicates that the Hubble constant is now increasing. Can you clarify this enigma? Also., if the Hubble constant eventually decreases, why is there a lower limit to its value?
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