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Epimetheus
Saturn XI - 1980S3


 

Epimetheus [ep-eh-MEE-thee-us] is the fifth satellite of Saturn. It was discovered by R. Walker in 1980. Epimetheus was the son of Iapetus and brother to Prometheus and Atlas. Epimetheus means hindsight in Greek. It has an irregular shape with a size of 144x108x98 kilometers (89x67x61 miles) in diameter. It is traversed by several large and small grooves, valleys and ridges. Several craters larger than 30 km can be seen on its surface. The pervasive cratering indicates that its surface must be several billion years old. The above image shows the shadow of Saturn's F Ring crossing its surface.

Epimetheus and Janus share the same orbit of 151,472 kilometers from Saturn's center or 91,000 kilometers above the cloud tops. They are only separated by about 50 kilometers. As these two satellites approach each other they exchange a little momentum and trade orbits; the inner satellite becomes the outer and the outer moves to the inner position. This exchange happens about once every four years. Janus and Epimetheus may have formed from a disruption of a single parent to form co-orbital satellites. If this is the case, the disruption must have happened early in the history of the satellite system.

Epimetheus Statistics
 Discovered byR. Walker 
 Date of discovery1980 
 Mass (kg)5.6e+17* 
 Mass (Earth = 1)9.3708e-08 
 Radius (km)72x54x49 
 Radius (Earth = 1)1.1289e-02 
 Mean density (gm/cm^3)0.7* 
 Mean distance from Saturn (km)151,422 
 Rotational period (days)0.6942 
 Orbital period (days)0.6942 
 Mean orbital velocity (km/sec)15.87 
 Orbital eccentricity0.009 
 Orbital inclination (degrees)0.34 
 Escape velocity (km/sec)0.0322 
 Visual geometric albedo0.8 
 Magnitude (Vo)15.7 

Views of Epimetheus

Epimetheus
This is the highest resolution image of Epimetheus acquired by the Voyager spacecrafts. Voyager 1 obtained this photo on November 11, 1980. In this image, Saturn's F Ring casts a shadow across Epimetheus' surface. (Copyright 1999 Calvin J. Hamilton)

Epimetheus, From Voyager 2
This image of Epimetheus was acquired by the Voyager 2 spacecraft on August 26, 1981. Although the resolution is limited in this view, yet numerous craters are visible. (Copyright 1999 Calvin J. Hamilton)

Epimetheus, From Voyager 2
This low resolution image shows another view of Epimetheus as was seen by the Voyager 2 spacecraft on August 26, 1981. (Copyright 1999 Calvin J. Hamilton)

Simple Cylindrical Map of Epimetheus
This image is a Simple Cylindrical map of Epimetheus centered at 180 degrees longitude. It was constructed from Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 pictures of Epimetheus using a shape model of Peter Thomas. (Courtesy A. Tayfun Oner)

Topographic Map of Epimetheus
This is a topographic map of Epimetheus. It is based upon the shape model of Phil Stooke. As with all maps, it is the cartographer's interpretation; not all features are necessarily certain given the limited data available. This interpretation stretches the data as far as possible. (Courtesy A. Tayfun Oner)

Conformal Projection of Epimetheus
This image is a shaded relief map of Epimetheus, the smaller co-orbital satellite of Saturn. As with all maps, it is the cartographer's interpretation and not all features are necessarily certain given the limited data available. This interpretation stretches the data as far as is feasible. This image shows two different views of Epimetheus in a Morphographic Conformal Projection. One view shows the leading side and the other the trailing side. (Courtesy Phil Stooke, NSSDC, and NASA)

References

Stooke, P. J., "The Topography of Epimetheus," Earth, Moon and Planets, 63 (1993), 67-83.

 

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