Science | Titan Methane Rains on Titan... Every 1K Years Storms are rare, but they're doozies By Mark Russell Posted Mar 23, 2012 2:40 PM CDT Copied This true-color image taken in visible wavelengths by the Cassini spacecraft on June 10, 2004, shows Titan, a moon of Saturn, enveloped in a photochemical smog. (AP Photo/ NASA, JPL, FILE) Scientists think there are only two places in the solar system where liquid rains fall on solid land—the Earth and Saturn's moon Titan. But on Titan, that rain isn't water, it's methane, and it falls as little as once every 1,000 years in parts, according to a new paper presented at a Texas astronomy conference, reports the BBC. "You get centuries between rain showers, but when they occur, they dump tens of centimeters or even meters of rainfall," says a physicist. "That's consistent with the deeply incised river channels that we see." Read These Next Jimmy Fallon's pasta sauces are now kaput thanks to Epstein files. It's not great news for our neighborhood Wendy's restaurants. Kristi Noem won't like this Wall Street Journal exposé. It takes deep pockets to buy a $400M slice of Rodeo Drive. Report an error