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Helene (moon)

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Helene
Discovery
Discovered byLaques and
Lecacheux
Discovery dateMarch 1, 1980
Orbital characteristics
377,396 km
Eccentricity0.0022
2.736915 d [1]
Inclination0.199° (to Saturn's equator)
Satellite ofSaturn
Physical characteristics
Dimensions36 × 32 × 30 km
16 km
assumed synchronous
zero
Albedo1.67 ± 0.20 (geometric)[2]

Helene (Template:Pron-en HEL-ə-nee, sometimes /hɨˈliːniː/ hə-LEE-nee, or as in Greek Ἑλένη) is a moon of Saturn. It was discovered by Pierre Laques and Jean Lecacheux in 1980 from ground-based observations at Pic du Midi Observatory, and was designated S/1980 S 6.[3] In 1988 it was officially named after Helen of Troy, who was the granddaughter of Cronus (Saturn) in Greek mythology.[4] The moon is also designated Saturn XII, a number which it received in 1982, under the designation Dione B,[5] because it is co-orbital with Dione and located in its leading Lagrangian point (L4).


Exploration

The closest images of Helene are from the Cassini spacecraft's 36,000 km fly-by in 2007. Helene will be the target of a much closer fly-by (1800 km) during Cassini's extended mission on 2010 March 3.

References

  1. ^ NASA Celestia
  2. ^ Verbiscer, A.; French, R.; Showalter, M.; and Helfenstein, P.; Enceladus: Cosmic Graffiti Artist Caught in the Act, Science, Vol. 315, No. 5813 (February 9, 2007), p. 815 (supporting online material, table S1)
  3. ^ IAUC 3496: Satellites of Saturn 1980 July 31 (discovery)
  4. ^ IAUC 4609: Satellites of Saturn and Uranus 1988 June 8 (naming the moon)
  5. ^ Transactions of the International Astronomical Union, Vol. XVIIIA, 1982 (mentioned in IAUC 3872: Satellites of Jupiter and Saturn, 1983 September 30)