Titan Science with the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST)
Conor A. Nixon, Richard K. Achterberg, Mate Adamkovics, Bruno Bezard,, Gordon L. Bjoraker, Thomas Cornet, Alexander G. Hayes, Emmanuel Lellouch,, Mark T. Lemmon, Manuel Lopez-Puertas, Sebastien Rodriguez, Christophe Sotin,, Nicholas A. Teanby, Elizabeth P. Turtle, Robert A. West

TL;DR
The paper explores JWST's potential to significantly advance Titan science through high-resolution infrared observations, focusing on surface, atmospheric composition, and temporal monitoring capabilities.
Contribution
It identifies key scientific themes for Titan observation with JWST and discusses instrument capabilities, limitations, and observing strategies to maximize scientific return.
Findings
JWST will surpass Cassini in spectral resolution at near-infrared wavelengths.
JWST will provide higher spatial resolution than HST for Titan observations.
Potential for long-term time-domain monitoring of Titan's seasonal changes.
Abstract
The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), scheduled for launch in 2018, is the successor to the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) but with a significantly larger aperture (6.5 m) and advanced instrumentation focusing on infrared science (0.6-28.0 m ). In this paper we examine the potential for scientific investigation of Titan using JWST, primarily with three of the four instruments: NIRSpec, NIRCam and MIRI, noting that science with NIRISS will be complementary. Five core scientific themes are identified: (i) surface (ii) tropospheric clouds (iii) tropospheric gases (iv) stratospheric composition and (v) stratospheric hazes. We discuss each theme in depth, including the scientific purpose, capabilities and limitations of the instrument suite, and suggested observing schemes. We pay particular attention to saturation, which is a problem for all three instruments, but may be alleviated for…
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