Moons of Saturn

natural satellites of the planet Saturn From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The planet Saturn has 274 moons: 63 that have been named and 211 that are yet to be named.[1] Most of the moons are very small: 248 are less than 10 km (6 mi) in diameter.[2] The moons are named after Titans, Giants, or minor Greek or Roman gods.

Confirmed moons

The moons of Saturn that were announced by 2018 are listed here by orbital period (or semi-major axis), from shortest to longest. Moons massive enough for their surfaces to have collapsed into a spheroid are highlighted in bold, while the irregular moons are listed in red, orange and gray background.
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Unconfirmed moons

The following objects (observed by Cassini) have not been confirmed as solid bodies. It is not yet clear if these are real satellites or merely persistent clumps within the F Ring.

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Hypothetical moons

Two moons were claimed to be discovered by different astronomers but never seen again. Both moons were said to orbit between Titan and Hyperion.

  • Chiron which was supposedly sighted by Hermann Goldschmidt in 1861, but never observed by anyone else.
  • Themis was allegedly discovered in 1905 by astronomer William Pickering, but never seen again. Nevertheless, it was included in numerous almanacs and astronomy books until the 1960s.
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References

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