Publication Date:
2011-08-19
Description:
Triton, the only large moon in the solar system with a retrograde motion, is investigated. The moon rotates about Neptune every 5.88 days and its annual cycle lasts 165 years. The orbit of Triton is 355,000 km from Neptune and it is inclined 23 deg relative to Neptune's equator. The precession of its orbital plane causes complications in its seasonal progression. Triton has a radius of 1353 km and a density of 2.07 gm/cu cm. Triton is believed to have a core of rock surrounded by water ice and a surface veneer of methane and nitrogen ice. The bright haze in its atmosphere could be small grains of particulates. Triton's surface features suggest that the moon should have remained molten until about 1 billion years ago. In order to explain the active geyser-like plumes observed near the subsolar latitude of about 50 deg south, various mechanisms are suggested including explosive escape of nitrogen gas, surface winds, and buoyancy of warmer gas. Voyager 2, which left Neptune and Triton in August 1989 and is now moving out of the solar system, is expected to provide the first glimpses of interstellar material.
Keywords:
LUNAR AND PLANETARY EXPLORATION
Type:
Earth in Space (ISSN 1040-3124); 3; 10-14
Format:
text
Permalink