Orthosia (moon)
| Orthosia | |
|---|---|
| Provisional or systematic name | S / 2001 J 9 |
| Central body | Jupiter |
| Properties of the orbit | |
| Major semi-axis | 20,720,000 km |
| Periapsis | 14,902,000 km |
| Apoapsis | 26,538,000 km |
| eccentricity | 0.2808 |
| Orbit inclination | 145.921 ° |
| Orbital time | 622.56 d |
| Mean orbital velocity | 2.37 km / s |
| Physical Properties | |
| Albedo | 0.04 |
| Apparent brightness | 23.1 mag |
| Medium diameter | ≈ 2 km |
| Dimensions | ~ 1.1 × 10 13 kg |
| Medium density | 2.6 g / cm 3 |
| Acceleration of gravity on the surface | ≈ 0 m / s 2 |
| Escape speed | ≈ 0 m / s |
| discovery | |
| Explorer | |
| Date of discovery | December 11, 2001 |
Orthosie (also Jupiter XXXV) is one of the smallest known outer moons of the planet Jupiter .
discovery
Orthosia was discovered on December 11, 2001 by astronomers at the University of Hawaii. It was initially given the provisional designation S / 2001 J 9.
The moon was named after Orthosie , one of the horizons from Greek mythology .
Orbit data
Orthosia orbits Jupiter at a mean distance of 20,720,000 km in 622.56 days. The track has an eccentricity of 0.2808. With an inclination of 145.9 ° to the local Laplace plane , the orbit is retrograde; that is, the moon moves around the planet against the direction of rotation of Jupiter.
Due to its orbital properties, orthosia is assigned to the Ananke group , named after the Jupiter moon Ananke .
Physical data
Orthosia has a mean diameter of about 2 km. Their density is estimated at 2.6 g / cm³. It is probably made up mainly of silicate rock. Orthosia has a very dark surface with an albedo of 0.04, i.e. that is, only 4% of the incident sunlight is reflected. Their apparent brightness is 23.1 m .
Web links
- MPEC 2002-J54: Eleven new Satellites of Jupiter May 15, 2002 (discovery)
- IAUC 7900: Satellites of Jupiter May 16, 2002 (discovery)
- MPEC 2003-D36: S / 2001 J 9 February 28, 2003 (rediscovery)
- IAUC 8177: Satellites of Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus August 8, 2003 (numbering and naming)
| before | Jupiter moons | after that |
| Euporia | Orthosia |
Sponde |