Pandora (moon)

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

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.

List of photos

Notes

  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

{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.