Exploring the Surface of Titan

Professor John Zarnecki

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Date and time
15 April 2026
6:30pm - 8:00pm
Add to Calendar 04/15/2026 06:30 PM 04/15/2026 08:00 PM Europe/London Exploring the Surface of Titan A Manchester Lit & Phil event: One of the instruments on Huygens, which made the 1.5 billion km trek to the surface of Titan, was designed by Dr John Geake from the University of Manchester. Lecture Theatre, Renold Innovation Hub, 81 Sackville Street
Manchester M1 3NJ
(Access via Altrincham Street Entrance)
Location

Lecture Theatre, Renold Innovation Hub
81 Sackville Street
Manchester M1 3NJ
(Access via Altrincham Street Entrance)

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Price
£15.00 General Admission / £6.00 Students / Members book for FREE
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Overview

What does it take to land on one of the most mysterious worlds in the Solar System?

After a 7-year journey of 1.5 billion km, the joint NASA–ESA Cassini-Huygens mission reached Saturn in 2004. On Christmas Day 2004, the European-built Huygens probe separated from Cassini and began its final approach to Titan, Saturn’s largest moon. Just over two weeks later, Huygens descended through Titan’s dense, orange atmosphere for more than two hours, transmitting extraordinary data all the way down before making a historic soft landing. It continued sending images and measurements from the frozen surface for over an hour — and remains, to this day, the most distant soft landing ever achieved in the Solar System.

This remarkable mission also has a Manchester story. One of the instruments carried all the way to Titan was designed by Dr John Geake of the University of Manchester. Decades later, a small piece of Manchester technology still rests on Titan’s cold, hazy landscape.

In this special talk, Professor John Zarnecki, Principal Investigator for a collection of instruments in the Huygens Science Surface Package, will offer personal insights into one of the great adventures of modern space exploration. He will explore how the mission came together, what its scientific objectives were, what Huygens discovered about Titan’s atmosphere and surface, and what we can expect from Dragonfly, NASA’s upcoming mission to return to Titan.

If you are fascinated by space exploration, planetary science, engineering, or the stories behind ambitious scientific missions, this is an event not to miss.

There will be time for questions and discussion. Early booking is strongly recommended.

Who Should Attend?

This event will appeal to:

  • anyone interested in space, astronomy, and planetary science
  • students and lifelong learners curious about how space missions are designed and delivered
  • people interested in NASA, ESA, and the history of major space exploration missions
  • audiences keen to hear a first-hand account from a leading scientist involved in the mission
  • those with an interest in Manchester’s contribution to global scientific discovery

No specialist knowledge is required.

Questions This Talk Will Explore

  • How did the Cassini-Huygens mission begin, and why was Titan such an important target?
  • What were the mission’s main scientific objectives?
  • What did Huygens reveal about Titan’s atmosphere, surface, and weather?
  • What made landing on Titan so technically challenging?
  • What role did scientists and engineers from Manchester play?
  • Why is Titan still one of the most exciting destinations in the Solar System?
  • How is NASA’s Dragonfly mission progressing, and what could it discover next?

Practical Information

The presentation will include time for questions and discussion.

Booking is strongly advised.

Access

Access to the event is via the Altrincham Street entrance.

Accessibility Information

If you have any specific accessibility requirements, please contact us at events@manlitphil.ac.uk.

Professor John Zarnecki

Professor John Zarnecki is a distinguished English space scientist whose career has been marked by sustained leadership in planetary exploration and internationally recognised scholarship in space science. Since 2013, he has served as a Director of the International Space Science Institute in Bern, Switzerland. Prior to this appointment, he was Professor of Space Science at The Open University from 2004 to 2013, where he now holds the title of Emeritus Professor. Earlier in his career, he held academic and research appointments at the University of Kent.

Professor Zarnecki has played a prominent role in a number of major international space probe missions and is widely regarded for his expertise in space debris, cosmic dust, and impact processes. In recognition of his outstanding contributions to the field, he was awarded the Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society in 2014. In May 2016, he assumed the Presidency of the Royal Astronomical Society, having previously served as Vice-President from 2009 to 2011 and as President-Elect from May 2015.

He is currently Team Leader for the ExoMars mission, Europe’s first Mars rover programme, and also serves as Co-Investigator on the Ptolemy instrument for the Rosetta mission to comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko.

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