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Polydeuces (moon)

Polydeuces
Discovery
Discovered by Porco et al.
Discovered in 2004
Orbital characteristics
Semimajor axis 377,390 km
Eccentricity 0.0182
Orbital period 65 h 41 min 05 s
Inclination 0.1705°
Is a satellite of Saturn
Physical characteristics
Mean diameter 3.5 km
Mass  ? kg
Mean density  ? g/cm3
Surface gravity  ? m/s2
Rotation period  ?
Axial tilt  ?°
Albedo  ?
Surface temperature
min mean max
 ? K  ? K  ? K
Atmosphere none

Polydeuces (pawl'-ee-dew'-seez, Greek Πολυδεύκης) is a natural satellite of Saturn that was discovered on images taken on October 21, 2004 by the Cassini imaging team, led by Carolyn C. Porco et al, and given the temporary designation S/2004 S 5. It is co-orbital with Dione and is located in the trailing Lagrangian point (L5). Its diameter is estimated to be about 3.5 km. It is also designated as Saturn XXXIV.

Of the known Lagrangian co-orbitals in the Saturn system, Polydeuces wanders the most from the Lagrangian point, straying up to 32 degrees from L5.

The name Polydeuces was approved by the IAU Working Group on Planetary Science Nomenclature on January 21, 2005. In Greek mythology, Polydeuces is another name for Pollux, brother of Castor.

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... | Telesto, Tethys, Calypso | Polydeuces, Dione, Helene | Rhea | ...
Last updated: 05-25-2005 03:24:24
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