| Discovery | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Discovered by | Giovanni Cassini | ||||||
| Discovered in | March 21, 1684 | ||||||
| Orbital characteristics | |||||||
| Semimajor axis | 377,396 km | ||||||
| Eccentricity | 0.0022 * | ||||||
| Orbital period | 2.736915 d * | ||||||
| Inclination | 0.019° (to Saturn's equator) | ||||||
| Satellite of | Saturn | ||||||
| Physical characteristics | |||||||
| Mean diameter | 1123.2 km (1127.6×1122×1120.6) * | (0.087645 Earths)||||||
| Mass | 1.096 kg | (3.28 Earths)||||||
| Mean density | 1.50 g/cm3 | ||||||
| Surface gravity | 0.24 m/s2 | ||||||
| Escape velocity | 0.51 km/s | ||||||
| Rotation period | 2.736915 d (synchronous) | ||||||
| Axial tilt | zero | ||||||
| Albedo | 0.55 | ||||||
| Surface temperature | |||||||
| min | mean | max |
|---|---|---|
| 87 K (-186°C) |
The names of all seven satellites of Saturn then known come from John Herschel (son of William Herschel, discoverer of Mimas and Enceladus) in his 1847 publication Results of Astronomical Observations made at the Cape of Good Hope (*), wherein he suggested the names of the Titans, sisters and brothers of Cronos (the Greek Saturn), be used.
Though somewhat smaller, Dione is otherwise very similar to Rhea. They both have similar compositions, albedo features and varied terrain, and both have dissimilar leading and trailing hemispheres. Dione's leading hemisphere is heavily cratered and is uniformly bright. Its trailing hemisphere, meanwhile, contains an unusual and distinctive surface feature: a network of bright, wispy streaks on a dark background that overlay the craters, indicating that they are newer. These are now known to be ice cliffs.
Scientists recognise the following types of Dionean geological feature:
However, the latest images from Cassini show that this hypothesis is incorrect, and that the wisps are in fact not ice deposits at all, but rather the bright ice cliffs created by tectonic fractures; Dione has been revealed as a world riven by enormous fractures on its trailing hemisphere.
The Cassini orbiter performed a closer flyby of Dione (500 km) on October 11, 2005, and captured oblique images of the cliffs, showing that some of them are several hundred metres high.
Like Callisto, Dione's craters lack the high relief features seen on the Moon and Mercury; this is probably due to slumping of the weak icy crust over geologic time.
Диона (спътник) | Dione (satèl·lit) | Dione (měsíc) | Dione (måne) | Dione (Mond) | Dione (luna) | Dioné (lune) | Diona (mjesec) | Dione (astronomia) | דיוני | Dione (satelles) | Dione (maan) | ディオネ (衛星) | Saturnmånen Dione | Dione (księżyc) | Dione (satélite) | Диона (спутник) | Dione (mesiac) | Diona (luna) | Dione (kuu) | Dione (måne) | 土卫四
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Dione (moon)".
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