Thebe (moon)

Thebe
Image of Thebe taken by the Galileo spacecraft on 4 January 2000. The large crater near the center is Zethus
Discovery
Discovered byStephen P. Synnott / Voyager 1
Discovery date5 March 1979
Designations
Pronunciation/ˈθb/[1]
Named after
Θήβη Thēbē
AdjectivesThebean /θˈbən/[2]
Orbital characteristics
Periapsis218000 km[a]
Apoapsis226000 km[b]
Mean orbit radius
221889.0±0.6 km (3.11 RJ)[3]
Eccentricity0.0175±0.0004[3]
0.674536±0.000001 d (16 h 11.3 min)[3]
23.92 km/s (calculated)
Inclination1.076°±0.003° (to Jupiter's equator)[3]
Satellite ofJupiter
Physical characteristics
Dimensions116 × 98 × 84 km[4]
49.3±2.0 km[4]
Volume≈ 500000 km3
0.04 m/s2 (0.004 g)[4][c]
20–30m/s[5][d]
synchronous
zero
Albedo0.047±0.003[6]
Temperature≈ 124 K

Thebe /ˈθb/, also known as Jupiter XIV, is the fourth of Jupiter's moons by distance from the planet. It was discovered by Stephen P. Synnott in images from the Voyager 1 space probe taken on March 5, 1979, while making its flyby of Jupiter.[7] In 1983, it was officially named after the mythological nymph Thebe.[8]

The second largest of the inner satellites of Jupiter, Thebe orbits within the outer edge of the Thebe gossamer ring that is formed from dust ejected from its surface.[5] It is irregularly shaped and reddish in colour, and is thought like Amalthea to consist of porous water ice with unknown amounts of other materials. Its surface features include large craters and high mountains—some of them are comparable to the size of the moon itself.[4]

Thebe was photographed in 1979 by the Voyager 1 and 2 spacecraft, and later, in more detail, by the Galileo orbiter in the 1990s.[4]

  1. ^ Noah Webster (1884) A Practical Dictionary of the English Language
  2. ^ The adjectives "Theban" and sometimes "Thebean" (with stress on the first syllable) refer to the city of Thebes, Greece.
  3. ^ a b c d Cooper Murray et al. 2006.
  4. ^ a b c d e Thomas Burns et al. 1998.
  5. ^ a b Burns Simonelli et al. 2004.
  6. ^ Simonelli Rossier et al. 2000.
  7. ^ Synnott 1980.
  8. ^ IAUC 3872.


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