Showing posts with label Voyager 1. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Voyager 1. Show all posts

Monday, 18 December 2023

1966, EPIMETHEUS IS DISCOVERED BY RICHARD WALKER

Today, The Grandma has received the wonderful visit of one of her closest friends, Joseph de Ca'th Lon.
 
Joseph likes Astronomy and they have been talking about Epimetheus, the inner satellite of Saturn.
 
They have been talking about Epimetheus, the satellite of Saturn, that was discovered by astronomer Richard Walker on a day like today in 1966.

Epimetheus is an inner satellite of Saturn. It is also known as Saturn XI. It is named after the mythological Epimetheus, brother of Prometheus.

Epimetheus occupies essentially the same orbit as the moon Janus. Astronomers assumed that there was only one body in that orbit (disbelieving that two moons could share nearly identical orbits without colliding), and accordingly had difficulty determining their orbital characteristics. 

Observations were photographic and spaced widely apart in time, so that while the presence of two objects was not obvious, the observations were difficult to reconcile with a reasonable orbit.

Audouin Dollfus observed a moon on 15 December 1966, which he proposed to be named Janus.

On 18 December, Richard Walker made a similar observation which is now credited as the discovery of Epimetheus. However, at the time, it was believed that there was only one moon, unofficially known as Janus, in the given orbit.

Twelve years later, in October 1978, Stephen M. Larson and John W. Fountain realised that the 1966 observations were best explained by two distinct objects (Janus and Epimetheus) sharing very similar orbits.

This was confirmed in 1980 by Voyager 1, and so Larson and Fountain officially share the discovery of Epimetheus with Walker. A moon that was probably Epimetheus appeared in two Pioneer 11 images and was designated 1979S1, there is uncertainty though because the two images were not enough to allow a reliable orbit to be calculated.

More information: NASA

Epimetheus received its name in 1983. The name Janus was approved by the IAU at the same time, although the name had been used informally since Dollfus proposed it shortly after the 1966 discovery.

Epimetheus's orbit is co-orbital with that of Janus. Janus's mean orbital radius from Saturn is, as of 2006 (as shown by green color in the adjacent picture), only 50 km less than that of Epimetheus, a distance smaller than either moon's mean radius. In accordance with Kepler's laws of planetary motion, the closer orbit is completed more quickly. Because of the small difference it is completed in only about 30 seconds less. Each day, the inner moon is an additional 0.25° farther around Saturn than the outer moon. As the inner moon catches up to the outer moon, their mutual gravitational attraction increases the inner moon's momentum and decreases that of the outer moon.

This added momentum means that the inner moon's distance from Saturn and orbital period are increased, and the outer moon's are decreased. The timing and magnitude of the momentum exchange is such that the moons effectively swap orbits, never approaching closer than about 10,000 km. At each encounter Janus's orbital radius changes by ~20 km and Epimetheus's by ~80 km: Janus's orbit is less affected because it is four times more massive than Epimetheus.

The exchange takes place close to every four years; the last close approaches occurred in January 2006, 2010, 2014 and 2018. This is the only such orbital configuration of moons known in the Solar System (although, 3753 Cruithne is an asteroid which is co-orbital with Earth).

The orbital relationship between Janus and Epimetheus can be understood in terms of the circular restricted three-body problem, as a case in which the two moons (the third body being Saturn) are similar in size to each other.

There are several Epimethean craters larger than 30 km in diameter, as well as both large and small ridges and grooves. The extensive cratering indicates that Epimetheus must be quite old. Janus and Epimetheus may have formed from a disruption of a single parent to form co-orbital satellites, but if this is the case the disruption must have happened early in the history of the satellite system. From its very low density and relatively high albedo, it seems likely that Epimetheus is a very porous icy body. There is considerable uncertainty in these values, however, and so this remains to be confirmed.

The south pole shows what might be the remains of a large impact crater covering most of this face of the moon, and which could be responsible for the somewhat flattened shape of the southern part of Epimetheus.

There appear to be two terrain types: darker, smoother areas, and brighter, slightly more yellowish, fractured terrain. One interpretation is that the darker material evidently moves down slopes, and probably has a lower ice content than the brighter material, which appears more like bedrock. Nonetheless, materials in both terrains are likely to be rich in water ice.

A faint dust ring is present around the region occupied by the orbits of Epimetheus and Janus, as revealed by images taken in forward-scattered light by the Cassini spacecraft in 2006. The ring has a radial extent of about 5000 km. Its source are particles blasted off their surfaces by meteoroid impacts, which then form a diffuse ring around their orbital paths.

Along with Janus, Epimetheus acts as a shepherd moon, maintaining the sharp outer edge of the A Ring in a 7:6 orbital resonance. The effect is more obvious when the more massive Janus is on the resonant (inner) orbit.

More information: NASA


Saturn is accompanied by a very large
and diverse collection of moons.
They range in size from a few kilometers
across to as big across as the U.S.

Carolyn Porco

Thursday, 9 September 2021

AMALTHEA, A NEW MOON OF JUPITER IS DISCOVERED

Today, The Grandma has received the wonderful visit of one of her closest friends, Joseph de Ca'th Lon.

Joseph loves astronomy, and they have been talking about Amalthea, the third closest and fifth found moon of Jupiter, that was discovered by Edward Emerson Barnard on a day like today in 1892.

Amalthea is a moon of Jupiter. It has the third-closest orbit around Jupiter among known moons and was the fifth moon of Jupiter to be discovered, so it is also known as Jupiter V.

It is also the fifth-largest moon of Jupiter, after the four Galilean Moons. 

Edward Emerson Barnard discovered the moon on 9 September 1892 and named it after Amalthea of Greek mythology. It was the last natural satellite to be discovered by direct visual observation; all later moons were discovered by photographic or digital imaging.

Amalthea is in a close orbit around Jupiter and is within the outer edge of the Amalthea Gossamer Ring, which is formed from dust ejected from its surface.

Jupiter would appear 46.5 degrees in diameter from its surface. Amalthea is the largest of the inner satellites of Jupiter and is irregularly shaped and reddish. It is thought to consist of porous water ice with unknown amounts of other materials. Its surface features include large craters and ridges.

Close range images of Amalthea were taken in 1979 by the Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 spacecraft, and in more detail by the Galileo orbiter in the 1990s.

More information: NASA

Amalthea was discovered on 9 September 1892 by Edward Emerson Barnard using the 91 cm refractor telescope at Lick Observatory.

It was the last planetary satellite to be discovered by direct visual observation, as opposed to photographically, and was the first new satellite of Jupiter since Galileo Galilei's discovery of the Galilean satellites in 1610.

Amalthea is named after the nymph Amalthea from Greek mythology, who nursed the infant Zeus, the Greek equivalent of Jupiter, with goat's milk. Its Roman numeral designation is Jupiter V.

The name Amalthea was not formally adopted by the IAU until 1976, although it had been in informal use for many decades. The name was initially suggested by Camille Flammarion. Before 1976, Amalthea was most commonly known simply as Jupiter V.

The surface of Amalthea is very red. This colour may be due to sulphur originating from Io or some other non-ice material. Bright patches of less red tint appear on the major slopes of Amalthea, but the nature of this colour is currently unknown.

The surface of Amalthea is slightly brighter than surfaces of other inner satellites of Jupiter. There is also a substantial asymmetry between leading and trailing hemispheres: the leading hemisphere is 1.3 times brighter than the trailing one.

More information: NASA

The asymmetry is probably caused by the higher velocity and frequency of impacts on the leading hemisphere, which excavate a bright material -presumably ice- from the interior of the moon.

There are four named geological features on Amalthea: two craters and two faculae (bright spots). The faculae are located on the edge of a ridge on the anti-Jupiter side of Amalthea.

Craters are named after characters in Greek mythology associated with Zeus and Amalthea, faculae after locations in associated with Zeus.

During 1979, the unmanned Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 space probes obtained the first images of Amalthea to resolve its surface features, they also measured the visible and infrared spectra and surface temperature.

Later, the Galileo orbiter completed the imaging of Amalthea's surface. Galileo made its final satellite fly-by at a distance of approximately 244 km from Amalthea's centre at a height of about 160–170 km on 5 November 2002, permitting the moon's mass to be accurately determined, while changing Galileo's trajectory so that it would plunge into Jupiter in September 2003 at the end of its mission.

In 2006, Amalthea's orbit was refined with measurements from New Horizons.

More information: Solar Views


 Jupiter is so big and its gravitational pull so strong
that man would find it difficult to move about on the surface.
The answer is to whittle it down to proper size
with terrajets and nuclear power,
using the debris to increase the size of Jupiter's moons so they,
too, can be colonized.

Fritz Zwicky