Jupiter LIX

Moon of Jupiter From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jupiter LIX, provisionally known as S/2017 J 1, is an outer irregular satellite of Jupiter on a retrograde orbit. It was reported on June 5, 2017, via a Minor Planet Electronic Circular from the Minor Planet Center.[5] It is about 2 km in diameter.[3]

Precovery image of Jupiter LIX on 8 September 2010 (circled)
Discoverydate5 June 2017
Designation
Jupiter LIX
Quick facts Discovery, Discovered by ...
Jupiter LIX
Precovery images of Jupiter LIX taken by the Canada–France–Hawaii Telescope in 2010
Discovery
Discovered byScott S. Sheppard et al.
Discovery date5 June 2017
Designations
Designation
Jupiter LIX
S/2017 J 1
Orbital characteristics[1]
Epoch 2026-01-01
Observation arc14 years
2024-12-03 (last obs)
Periapsis16.8 million km
Apoapsis31.5 million km
(2026-Mar-18)[2]
24.1 million km
Eccentricity0.305
−767 days
Inclination144.7°
Satellite ofJupiter
GroupPasiphae group
Physical characteristics
2 km[3]
23.8
16.83 (31 obs)[4]
    Close

    It is a member of the Pasiphae group. It has an average orbital distance of 24.1 million km, with an inclination of 144.7 degrees. Its period is 767 days.[1] It next comes to apojove (farthest distance from Jupiter) on 18 March 2026 when it will be 0.21 AU (31 million km; 20 million mi) from Jupiter.[2]

    References

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