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| Name | Current message text |
|---|---|
| h English (en) | Yet there are exceptions; in the depths of the solar system, the [[moon]] [[Saturn_(world)#Mainworld_Data|Titan]] orbits the ringed planet [[Saturn (world)|Saturn]]. Titan is cold, far from the [[sun]] and seismically inactive. It has no [[magnetosphere]] and with a surface [[gravity]] of only 0.14 G should not be able to retain an atmosphere - yet it has a [[dense atmosphere]] that is 1.45 times thicker than that of [[Earth]]'s [[Jupiter_(world)#Ganymede|Ganymede]] and [[Jupiter_(world)#Callisto|Callisto]], comparable-sized [[moon]]s of [[Jupiter]], are of a similar composition but do not have atmospheres. One theory suggests that [[Saturn_(world)#Mainworld_Data|Titan]], being farther from the [[sun]] than the [[moon]]s of [[Jupiter]], was colder during its formation. Gasses were trapped in the ice at those low temperatures and later made their way into [[Saturn_(world)#Mainworld_Data|Titan]]'s atmosphere. {{Page cite|name=The Universal World Profile|page=13-14}} |