Pandora (moon)

Saturn XVII, officially named after Pandora from Greek mythology

Pandora is a moon of Saturn. The moon was found in 1980 from Voyager 1’s photo and named after Pandora in Greek mythology. It is the outer shepherd satellite of Saturn's F ring, the inner satellite being Prometheus. Pandora has many craters in its surface.

Pandora
View of Pandora's western hemisphere.[a]
Discovery
Discovered byStewart A. Collins
D. Carlson
Voyager 1
Discovery dateOctober, 1980
Designations
MPC designationSaturn XVII
Pronunciation/pænˈdɔːrə/
Named after
Πανδώρα Pandōra
AdjectivesPandoran[1]
Orbital characteristics[2]
Epoch December 31, 2003 (JD 2453005.5)
141720±10 km
Eccentricity0.0042
0.628504213 d
Inclination0.050°±0.004° to Saturn's equator
Satellite ofSaturn
Physical characteristics
Dimensions103.0 × 79.0 × 63.0 km
(± 0.6 × 0.6 × 0.4 km)[3]: 2 
Mean diameter
80.0±0.6 km[3]: 2 
Volume268990±860 km3[4]: 4 
Mass(1.357±0.002)×1017 kg[b]
Mean density
0.5045±0.0017 g/cm3[4]: 4 
0.0022–0.0061 m/s2[3]: 3 
0.019 km/s at longest axis
to 0.024 km/s at poles
synchronous
zero
Albedo0.6
Temperature≈ 78 K

List of photos

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  1. This view was taken by Cassini, during the spacecraft's close flyby on December 18, 2016. The image was taken from a distance of 40,500 kilometres (25,200 miles); the closest approach by the spacecraft during its 14-year tenure in the Saturn system.
  2. Calculated from the standard gravitational parameter GM = (9.058±0.011)×10−3 km3·s–2 given by Lainey et al. (2023), divided by the gravitational constant G = 6.6743×10−2 km3·kg–1·s–2.[4]

Sources

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{{Commons category|Pandora (moon)

  1. Robert Kolvoord (1990) Saturn's F ring: imaging and simulation, p. 104
  2. Spitale Jacobson et al. 2006.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Thomas & Helfenstein 2020.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Lainey et al. 2023.