Saturn's moon Titan has liquid methane on and presumably below the surface.
Yes, but not liquid water. The surface of Titan is made mostly of ice. It also has lakes and rivers of liquid methane.
Yes, Titan is believed to have a subsurface ocean of liquid water beneath its icy crust. Evidence from Cassini mission suggests that there may be an underground liquid-water ocean near the south pole of Titan.
Yes, Titan has liquid methane and ethane lakes on its surface, but not liquid water due to its low temperatures (-290 degrees Fahrenheit). Water exists on Titan as ice in its crust and possibly in subsurface oceans.
Rain on Titan is believed to be composed of liquid methane or ethane due to the frigid conditions on the surface of the moon. These hydrocarbons condense into clouds in Titan's thick atmosphere and eventually rain down onto the surface in liquid form.
There are no liquids present on the surface of Venus. However, the appear to be lakes, seas, asn streams of liquid methane on the surface of Titan.
Yes.
Yes, Titan, one of Saturn's moons, has lakes, but they are not filled with water like on Earth. Instead, the lakes on Titan are composed of liquid methane and ethane. These hydrocarbons create a unique and methane-filled environment on the moon.
No. There is nothing liquid on the surface of the moon. The only objects in the solar system that have lasting liquid bodies on their surfaces are Earth and Titan, one of the moons of Saturn.
Titan, a moon of Saturn, shows evidence of rainfall and erosion by liquid methane and ethane. The Huygens probe, which landed on Titan in 2005, provided valuable data indicating the presence of rivers, lakes, and even rainfall on the moon's surface. This makes Titan the only known celestial body, aside from Earth, to have stable bodies of liquid on its surface.
Titan has no liquid water, it is too cold. But it does have oceans of methane. On Earth the temperature is way to hot for methane to be in liquid state. But on the cold surface of Titan the temperature and atmospheric pressure is just right for methane to exist in liquid form.Similar to how the temperature on Earth is just right for water to exist in liquid form.
Titan is not a planet, it is the largest moon of Saturn. While Titan does possess an atmosphere, that atmosphere does not contain free oxygen, which is a sign of photosynthetic life. Oxygen readily combines with other elements like hydrogen, carbon, silicon, iron, etc. Nor is there liquid water on the surface of Titan. There is probably quit a bit of solid H2O there, however.
Under Titan's surface, there may be ice. NASA scientists believe there is liquid water beneath the water ice.