Quantcast

Articles

Asteroid Belt Earth Earth's Moon Jupiter Jupiter's Moon Adrastea Jupiter's Moon Amalthea Jupiter's Moon Callisto Jupiter's Moon Europa Jupiter's Moon Ganymede Jupiter's Moon Himalia Jupiter's Moon Io Jupiter's Moon Leda Jupiter's Moon Metis Jupiter's Moon Thebe Kuiper Belt Leonids Meteor Shower Lunar Eclipse Lunar Phase Mars Mars' Moon -- Deimos Mars' Moon -- Phobos Mercury Moon Neptune Neptune's Moon Despina Neptune's Moon Galatea Neptune's Moon Larissa Neptune's Moon Naiad Neptune's Moon Nereid Neptune's Moon Proteus Neptune's Moon Thalassa Neptune's Moon Triton Olympus Mons Oort Cloud Perseids Meteor Shower Pluto Pluto's Moon Charon Quaoar Saturn Saturn's Moon Atlas Saturn's Moon Calypso Saturn's Moon Dione Saturn's Moon Enceladus Saturn's Moon Epimetheus Saturn's Moon Helene Saturn's Moon Hyperion Saturn's Moon Iapetus Saturn's Moon Janus Saturn's Moon Mimas Saturn's Moon Pan Saturn's Moon Pandora Saturn's Moon Phoebe Saturn's Moon Prometheus Saturn's Moon Rhea Saturn's Moon Telesto Saturn's Moon Tethys Saturn's Moon Titan Solar Eclipse Solar Flare Solar Maximum Solar Prominence Solar Radiation Solar System Solar Wind Sunspot The Sun Uranus Uranus' Moon Ariel Uranus' Moon Belinda Uranus' Moon Bianca Uranus' Moon Caliban Uranus' Moon Cordelia Uranus' Moon Cressida Uranus' Moon Desdemona Uranus' Moon Juliet Uranus' Moon Miranda Uranus' Moon Oberon Uranus' Moon Ophelia Uranus' Moon Portia Uranus' Moon Puck Uranus' Moon Rosalind Uranus' Moon Sycorax Uranus' Moon Titania Uranus' Moon Umbriel Van Allen Radiation Belt Venus

Latest Thoughts



Saturn's Moon Iapetus


Credit: Image of Saturn's moon Iapetus. Credit: NASA
Download full size image

Saturn's moon Iapetus -- Iapetus is the third-largest moon of Saturn, discovered by Giovanni Cassini in 1671.

Its density is similar to that of Rhea, indicating that it has a small amount of rocky materials. Its leading side is dark (albedo 0.03-0.05) with a slight reddish color while its trailing side is bright (albedo 0.5, almost as bright as Europa).

This difference is so striking that Cassini noted that he could see Iapetus only on one side of Saturn and not on the other. The dark surface might be composed of matter that was either swept up from space or oozed from the moon's interior; the real source is still unknown.

The dark material might be a thin layer of organic material perhaps similar to the complex substances found in the most primitive meteorites. However, there are no bright-rimed craters present on the dark hemisphere; If the dark material is thin, it must be constantly renewed since a meteor impact would punch through the layer to reveal brighter surface material.

The dark material may have originated from Phoebe, which has a very low albedo. Micrometeor impacts could kick dark matter off Phoebe which is then swept up by Iapetus (Phoebe, however, has a slightly different color from that of the dark surface of Iapetus.)

The fact that the material is on the leading hemisphere seems to support this theory. On the other hand, the dark material seems to be concentrated in crater floors. This would indicate an internal origin.

Since Iapetus is so far from Saturn and thus avoided much of the heating its other moons received, it may have formed with methane or ammonia ice in its interior; the dark material could be explained by volcano-like eruptions of methane.

This theory is supported by a dark ring of material about 100 kilometers in diameter that straddles the border between the leading and trailing hemispheres of Iapetus. Such rings formed on the Moon and on Mars when dark volcanic material flowed into impact craters and filled around the central peak.

Iapetus is one of only two major Saturnian moons to have a significantly inclined orbital plane (the other is Phoebe).

-----

Discovery

Discovered by Giovanni Cassini
Discovered in 1671

Orbital characteristics

Semimajor axis 3,561,300 km
Eccentricity 0.0283
Revolution period 79d 7h 55m
Inclination 7.52�

Physical characteristics

Mean radius 718 km
Surface area 6,700,000 km2
Mass 1.9739�1021 kg
Mean density 1.27 g/cm3
Surface gravity ? m/s2
Rotation period 79d 7h 55m (synchronous)
Axial tilt 14.84�
Albedo 0.04-0.5
Atmosphere none

-----

NASA

Learn more on this topic from eLibrary here�



redOrbit Friends