Thalassa (moon)
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Naiad or Thalassa as seen by Voyager 2 (smearing has caused excessive elongation) |
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Discovery | |
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Discovered by | Richard J. Terrile and Voyager Imaging Team |
Discovered in | September 1989 |
Orbital characteristics | |
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Semi-major axis | 50 075 ± 1 km |
Eccentricity | 0.0002 ± 0.0002 |
Orbital period | 0.31148444 ± 0.00000006 d |
Inclination | 0.21 ± 0.02° (to Neptune equator) 0.21° (to local Laplace plane) |
Is a moon of | Neptune |
Physical characteristics | |
Dimensions | 108×100×52 km |
Mass | ~3.5×1017 kg (based on assumed density) |
Mean density | ~1.2 g/cm3 (estimate) |
Rotation period | assumed synchronous |
Axial tilt | ~zero presumably |
Albedo (geometric) | 0.09[1] |
Surface temp. | ~51 K mean (estimate) |
Atmosphere | none |
Thalassa or Neptune IV, is the second closest moon to Neptune. It was named after a daughter of Aether and Hemera from Greek mythology. "Thalassa" is also the Greek word for "sea".
Thalassa was discovered sometime before mid-September, 1989 from the images taken by the Voyager 2 probe. It was given the designation S/1989 N 5. The discovery was said (IAUC 4867) on September 29, 1989, but the text only talks of "25 frames taken over 11 days", giving a discovery date of sometime before September 18. The name was given on 16 September 1991.
Thalassa is not a sphere and shows no sign of any geological changes. Unusually for a non-spherical moon, it appears to be disk-shaped.
[change] Other websites
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Moons | Naiad · Thalassa · Despina · Galatea · Larissa · Proteus · Triton · Nereid · Halimede · Sao · Laomedeia · Psamathe · Neso | |
Characteristics | Rings of Neptune · Great Dark Spot | |
Discovery | John Couch Adams · Johann Gottfried Galle · William Lassell · Urbain Le Verrier | |
Exploration | Voyager program · Voyager 2 | |
Neptune Trojans | 2001 QR322 · 2004 UP10 · 2005 TN53 · 2005 TO74 · 2006 RJ103 · 2007 RW10 |