Pan (moon) Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
| Discovery | |
|---|---|
| Discovered by | M.R. Showalter |
| Discovered in | 1990 |
| Orbital characteristics | |
| Semimajor axis | 133,583 km |
| Eccentricity | 0 |
| Orbital period | 13 h 48 min |
| Inclination | 0° |
| Is a satellite of | Saturn |
| Physical characteristics | |
| Mean diameter | 20 km |
| Mass | 2.7×1015 kg |
| Mean density | 0.6 g/cm3 |
| Surface gravity | 0.002 m/s2 |
| Rotation period | unknown |
| Axial tilt | 0 ° |
| Albedo | 0.5 |
| Atmosphere | none |
The existence of such a moon in the Encke division was first predicted by Jeffrey N. Cuzzi and Jeffrey N. Scargle in 1985. Then Showalter et al. inferred its orbit and mass in 1986 by modeling its "wake", or gravitational disturbance. They arrived at a very precise prediction of 133,603 ± 10 km for the semimajor axis and a mass of 5–10 × 10-12 Saturn masses, and inferred that there was only a single moon within the Encke gap. [1] [1] The actual semi-major axis is 133,583 km and the mass is 2.7 × 1015 kg, or 4.7 x 10-12 of Saturn's mass of 5.688 × 1026 kg.
The moon was later found within 1° of the predicted position. The search was undertaken by considering all Voyager 2 images and using a computer calculation to predict whether the moon would be visible under sufficiently favorable conditions in each one. Every qualifying Voyager 2 image with resolution better than ~50 km/pixel shows Pan clearly. In all, it appears in eleven Voyager 2 images. [1]
There is also an asteroid called 4450 Pan.
This is an Article on Pan (moon). Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Pan (moon) References
