S/2004 S 3
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![]() Discovery image of S/2004 S 3 |
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Discovery | |
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Discovered by | Carl Murray / Cassini Imaging Science Team |
Discovered on | 21 June, 2004 |
Orbital characteristics | |
Semimajor axis | 140,100 − 140,600 km[1][2][3] |
Eccentricity | < 0.002 [4] |
Orbital period | 0.62 d |
Inclination | close to zero |
Is a satellite of | Saturn |
Physical characteristics | |
Mean diameter | 3-5 km |
Rotation period | probably synchronous |
Axial tilt | unknown |
Albedo | unknown |
Atmosphere | none |
S/2004 S 3 is the designation of an object seen orbiting Saturn just beyond the farther part of the F ring on 21 June, 2004. It was first seen by Carl Murray of the Cassini Imaging Science Team in pictures taken by the Cassini-Huygens probe on June 21, 2004,[3] and announced on September 9, 2004.[5]
Even though later astronomers tried to find it again, it has not been reliably seen since. Notably, an imaging sequence covering an entire orbital period at 4 km resolution taken on 15 November, 2004 failed to find the object. This suggests that it was a clump of material that had disappeared by that time.[1]
Another object, S/2004 S 4, was seen nearby 5 hours later, but this time just inside the F Ring. Because of the different location of the second object, it was given a fresh designation, although their interpretation as a single object on a F-ring crossing orbit is also possible.[5] Such an object might also be orbiting at a bit different inclination to the F ring, thereby not actually passing through the ring material even though it was being seen both radially inward and outward of it.
If a solid object after all, S/2004 S 3 would be 3−5 km in diameter based on brightness, and might be a shepherd satellite for the farther edge of Saturn's F ring.
[change] References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Spitale, J. N.; et al. (2006). "The orbits of Saturn's small satellites derived from combined historic and Cassini imaging observations". The Astronomical Journal 132: 692.
- ↑ IAUC 8432: Satellites and Rings of Saturn 2004 November 8 (claiming recovery of S/2004 S 3 on 17 October, 2004, in conflict with the later (2006) Spitale et al.)
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Martinez, C; Ormrod, G; and Finn, H.; Cassini Discovers Ring and One, Possibly Two, Objects at Saturn JPL news release (September 9 2004)
- ↑ Based on above semimajor axis range, and Spitale et al. (2006)
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 IAUC 8401: S/2004 S 3, S/2004 S 4, and R/2004 S 1 2004 September 9 (discovery)
[change] Other websites
- Cassini-Huygens press release about discoveries around the F ring in 2004
- Cassini-Huygens Multimedia: The Clump/Moon Mystery September 5, 2005 (images of the clumps and/or moons seen around the F ring by Cassini cameras)
Moons of Saturn | |
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Generally listed in increasing distance from Saturn. Temporary names in italics. | |
Ring shepherds | (moonlets) · Pan · Daphnis · Atlas · Prometheus · S/2004 S 6? · S/2004 S 4? · S/2004 S 3? · Pandora |
Co-orbitals | Epimetheus · Janus |
Inner large (and Trojan) |
|
Outer large | Rhea (rings) · Titan · Hyperion · Iapetus |
Inuit group | Kiviuq · Ijiraq · Paaliaq · Siarnaq · Tarqeq |
Norse group |
Phoebe · Skathi · S/2007 S 2 · Skoll · S/2004 S 13 · Greip · Hyrrokkin · Mundilfari · Jarnsaxa · S/2006 S 1 · S/2004 S 17 · Narvi · Bergelmir · Aegir · Suttungr · S/2004 S 12 · Bestla · Farbauti · Hati · S/2004 S 7 · Thrymr · S/2007 S 3 · S/2006 S 3 · Surtur · Kari · Fenrir · Ymir · Loge · Fornjot |
Gallic group | Albiorix · Bebhionn · Erriapo · Tarvos |
Rings of Saturn · Cassini-Huygens · Themis · Chiron |