Hyperion (Moon)

b>Hyperion
align="center" bgcolor="#000000" colspan="2" | Hyperion, acquired by Voyager 2 (NASA)
bgcolor="#a0ffa0" colspan="2" | Discovery
align="left" | Discovered by Bond, Bond & Lassell
align="left" | Discovered on 1848 September 16
bgcolor="#a0ffa0" colspan="2" | Orbital characteristics
align="left" | Semimajor axis 1,464,100 km
align="left" | Eccentricity 0.0175
align="left" | Orbital period 21.280 d
align="left" | Inclination 0.568°
align="left" | Is a satellite of Saturn
bgcolor="#a0ffa0" colspan="2" | Physical characteristics
align="left" | Mean diameter 266 km
align="left" | Mass 1.08×1019 kg
align="left" | Mean density 1.1 g/cm3
align="left" | Surface gravity 0.041 m/s2
align="left" | Rotation period chaotic
align="left" | Axial tilt variable
align="left" | Albedo 0.25
align="left" | Atmosphere no atmosphere
Hyperion (hye-peer'-ee-on) is a moon of Saturn discovered by William Cranch Bond, George Phillips Bond and William Lassell in 1848. It is named after Hyperion, a Titan in Greek mythology. It is also designated Saturn VII. Hyperion's discovery came not too long after John Herschel had suggested names for all seven previously-known satellites of Saturn in his 1847 publication Results of Astronomical Observations made at the Cape of Good Hope (http://adsabs.harvard.edu//full/seri/MNRAS/0008//0000042.000.html). Lassell, who saw Hyperion two days after the Bonds, had already endorsed Herschel's naming scheme and suggested the name Hyperion in accordance with it. He also beat the Bonds to publication. The Cassini orbiter is due to perform a flyby of Hyperion on September 25, 2005.

Physical characteristics

Hyperion is the largest highly irregular (non-spherical) body in the solar system (Proteus is quite a bit larger but is almost spherical). It seems likely that Hyperion is a fragment of a larger body that was broken by a large impact in the distant past. The largest crater on its surface is approximately 120 km in diameter and 10 km deep. Like most of Saturn's moons, Hyperion's low density indicates that it is composed of water ice with only a small amount of rock. But unlike most of Saturn's moons, Hyperion has a low albedo (0.2–0.3) indicating that it is covered by at least a thin layer of dark material. This may be material from Phoebe (which is much darker) that got past Iapetus. Hyperion is redder than Phoebe and closely matches the color of the dark material on Iapetus. See also: List of geological features on Hyperion

Rotation

The Voyager 2 images and subsequent ground based photometry indicate that Hyperion's rotation is chaotic, i.e. its axis of rotation wobbles so much that its orientation in space is completely unpredictable. Hyperion is the only known moon in the solar system that rotates chaotically but simulations seem to indicate that other irregular satellites may have done so in the past. Hyperion is unique among moons in that it is very irregularly shaped, has a highly eccentric orbit eccentricity of Hyperion, stated above is only 0.0175. This is not high and is, in fact, only marginally higher than the earth's relatively low eccentricity of 0.0167. Whether the remaining conditions stated are still unique to Hyperion and sufficient to cause its chaotic rotation, I couldn't say. , and is near another large moon (Titan). These factors combine to restrict the set of conditions under which stable rotation is possible. The 3:4 orbital resonance between Titan and Hyperion may also make chaotic rotation more likely. Hyperion's odd rotation probably accounts for the fact that Hyperion's surface is more or less uniform, in contrast to many of Saturn's other moons which have distinctly different leading and trailing hemispheres.

External links


... | Titan | (Themis) | 'Hyperion' | Iapetus | ...

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
hungarian cuisine
french toast
chief logan
toast
small appliance
painted desert
rambler (car)
locomotion
stephen foster
knott's berry farm
tonk
plucker
memento
dal
log flume
boysenberry
amish friendship bread
push printing
spell
pinner reaction
degrees of freedom
luis firpo
joe alessi
the juilliard school
seahouses
farne islands
peel tower
hyperion (poem)
hyperion (mythology)
roll film
european dueling sword
glorious first of june
medium format
list of godfathers
count of poitiers
messerschmitt
operon
polaroid corporation
well posed problem
brownie (camera)
audio feedback
bokn
vise
the open championship