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Neptune's natural satellites

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Neptune (top) and Triton (bottom), 3 days after Voyager 2 flyby
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Neptune (top) and Triton (bottom), 3 days after Voyager 2 flyby

Neptune has 9 known and 4 suspected moons. The largest by far is Triton, discovered by William Lassell just 17 days after the discovery of Neptune itself. Two natural satellites discovered in 2002 and 2003, Psamathe and S/2002 N 4, have the largest orbits of any natural satellites discovered in the Solar system to date. They take 25 years to orbit Neptune at an average of 125 times the distance between Earth and the Moon.

It is likely that Neptune's inner satellites are not the original bodies that formed with Neptune but accreted rubble from the havoc that was wreaked after Triton's capture. Triton's original captured orbit would have been highly eccentric, and caused chaotic perturbations in the orbits of the original inner Neptunian satellites, caussing them to collide and become reduced to a rubble disc. Only after Triton's orbit became circularised did some of the rubble disc re-accrete into the present-day satellites .


The natural satellites

The Neptunian moons are listed here by orbital period, from shortest to longest. Triton, which is not only massive enough for its surface to have collapsed into a spheroid, but is comparable in size to our own moon, is highlighted in purple. Irregular (captured) moons are shown in grey. (Triton is also thought to be captured.)

Name (spheroidal moon in bold)
()
Diameter (km) Mass
(1016 kg)
Mean orbital radius (km) Orbital period** (d)
Neptune III Naiad nye'-ad 67 (96×60×52) ~19 48,227 0.294
Neptune IV Thalassa thə-las'-ə 83 (108×100×52) ~35 50,075 0.311
Neptune V Despina des-pee'-nə 152 (180×150×130) ~210 52,526 0.335
Neptune VI Galatea gal'-ə-tee'-ə 175 (204×184×144) 212 61,953 0.429
Neptune VII Larissa lə-ris'-ə 195 (216×204×168) ~490 73,548 0.555
Neptune VIII Proteus proe'-tee-əs 418 (436 × 416 × 402) ~5,000 117,647 1.122
Neptune I Triton trye'-tən 2707 2,140,000 354,800 -5.877
Neptune II Nereid neer'-ee-id 340 ~3,100 5,513,400 360.14
S/2002 N 1* 60 ~9 15,728,000 -1879.71
S/2002 N 2* 38 ~9 22,422,000 2914.07
S/2002 N 3* 38 ~9 23,571,000 3167.85
Neptune X Psamathe sam'-ə-thee 28 ~1.5 46,695,000 -9115.91
S/2002 N 4* 60 ~9 48,387,000
(0.32 AU)
-9373.99

* Awaiting confirmation and naming.
** Negative orbital periods indicate a retrograde orbit around Neptune (opposite to the planet's rotation)

Naming notes

Some asteroids share the same names as moons of Neptune: 74 Galatea, 1162 Larissa. Note that Triton did not have an official name until the 20th century. Although the name was suggested in 1880 by Camille Flammarion, it did not come into common use until at least the 1930s. Usually, it was simply known as "the satellite of Neptune" (the second satellite, Nereid, was not discovered until 1949).

See also

References


               Neptune (satellites)               [http://encycl.opentopia.com/ edit ]
Naiad | Thalassa | Despina | Galatea | Larissa | Proteus | Triton | Nereid
S/2002 N 1 | S/2002 N 2 | S/2002 N 3 | Psamathe | S/2002 N 4
See also: | Neptune-Sun Lagrangian point asteroids | Rings of Neptune
[http://encycl.opentopia.com/ edit ] The Solar System

Planets: Mercury (planet)>Mercury - Venus - Earth - Mars - Jupiter - Saturn - Uranus - Neptune - Pluto
Other: Sun - Moon>The Moon - Asteroid belt - Main-belt comets - Kuiper belt - Scattered disc - Oort cloud
See also astronomical objects and the solar system's list of objects, sorted by radius or mass.

 


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