Difference between revisions of "S/2003 J 19"

From OrbiterWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page.)
Tag: Removed redirect
m (Arvil moved page User:Arvil/Sandbox02 to S/2003 J 19: Move to article page.)
(No difference)

Revision as of 13:43, 3 October 2024

S/2003 J 19
S2003J19-outerplanets050125zip-Orbiter2005P1.jpg
S/2003 J 19 from outerplanets-050125.zip in Orbiter 2005P1
Designation
Name S/2003 J 19
Reference body Jupiter
Planetary mean orbits
Epoch 2005.41409993155
Semimajor axis (a) 22699971529.4799 m
Eccentricity (e) 0.207608960194861
Inclination (i) 165.140356559884°
(2.88224294988739 radian)
Longitude of the ascending node (LAN, ☊) 46.4956712848643°
(0.811502551845864 radian)
Longitude of periapsis (ϖ) 225.863482343648°
(3.94206142691673 radian)
Mean longitude (L) 352.167978099449°
(6.14649073792666 radian)
Selected physical parameters
Mean radius 1
Mass 1.1×1013 kg
SidRotPeriod 63972288 (2.027 years)
SidRotOffset 0
Obliquity 0
LAN 0
Note *Elements given are from S2003-J19.cfg (outerplanets-050125.zip)

S/2003 J 19 (Jupiter LXI) a retrograde irregular moons of Jupiter. It was discovered by Brett J. Gladman et al in 2003.

S/2003 J 19 in Orbiter

S/2003 J 19 was released in the add-on outerplanets-050125.zip in January 2005.

Orbiter versions and add-ons which include S/2003 J 19
Add-on Source Version Author Type Release Date Compatibility Wiki article
The Outer Planets 050125 AVSIM 050125 Rolf Keibel
Tony Dunn
Scenery 26 January 2005 Orbiter 2005-P1

See also

S/2003 J 19 at Wikipedia

Gallery

Jupiter's natural satellites

edit

Named Satellites:

Adrastea | Aitne | Amalthea | Ananke | Aoede | Arche | Autonoe | Callirrhoe | Callisto | Carme | Carpo | Chaldene | Cyllene | Dia | Eirene | Elara | Erinome | Ersa | Euanthe | Eukelade | Eupheme | Euporie | Europa | Eurydome | Ganymede | Harpalyke | Hegemone | Helike | Hermippe | Herse | Himalia | Io | Iocaste | Isonoe | Kale | Kallichore | Kalyke | Kore | Leda | Lysithea | Megaclite | Metis | Mneme | Orthosie | Pandia | Pasiphae | Pasithee | Philophrosyne | Praxidike | Sinope | Sponde | Taygete | Thebe | Thelxinoe | Themisto | Thyone | Valetudo

Numbered Satellites:

S/2003 J 2 | S/2003 J 4 | S/2003 J 9 | S/2003 J 10 | S/2003 J 12 | S/2003 J 16 | S/2003 J 18 | S/2003 J 19 | S/2003 J 23 | S/2003 J 24 |S/2010 J 1 | S/2010 J 2 | S/2011 J 1 | S/2011 J 2 S/2011 J 3 | S/2016 J 1 | S/2016 J 3 | S/2016 J 4 | S/2017 J 1 | S/2017 J 2 | S/2017 J 3 | S/2017 J 5 | S/2017 J 6 | S/2017 J 7 | S/2017 J 8 | S/2017 J 9 | S/2018 J 2 |S/2018 J 3 | S/2018 J 4 | S/2021 J 1 S/2021 J 2 | S/2021 J 3 | S/2021 J 4 | S/2021 J 5 | S/2021 J 6 | S/2022 J 1 | S/2022 J 2 | S/2022 J 3

edit The Solar System
Central star

Sun (Sol)

Planets

Mercury - Venus - Earth - Mars - Jupiter - Saturn - Uranus - Neptune

Natural satellites

Moon - Phobos - Deimos - Io - Europa - Ganymede - Titan - more...

Add-ons

Planets - Dwarf Planets - Small objects - Natural satellites - Alternative star systems

Europa.jpg This natural satellite related article is a stub. You can help Orbiterwiki by expanding it.