Difference between revisions of "Deimos"
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'''Deimos''' is the smaller and outermost moon of [[Mars]]. Deimos was discovered by [[w:Asaph Hall|Asaph Hall]] at the [[w:United States Naval Observatory|United States Naval Observatory]] on 12 August 1877. [[w:Henry Madan|Henry Madan]] suggested the name Deimos from Greek mythology. | '''Deimos''' is the smaller and outermost moon of [[Mars]]. Deimos was discovered by [[w:Asaph Hall|Asaph Hall]] at the [[w:United States Naval Observatory|United States Naval Observatory]] on 12 August 1877. [[w:Henry Madan|Henry Madan]] suggested the name Deimos from Greek mythology. | ||
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==Deimos in Orbiter== | ==Deimos in Orbiter== | ||
− | Deimos has been a part of Orbiter since at least the release of Orbiter 2001. | + | Deimos has been a part of Orbiter since at least the release of Orbiter 2001. |
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+ | It is a sort of potato shaped body about 16 × 12 × 10 km in size, and is tidally locked so that the same side always faces Mars. It's about 2345 km from Mars in an almost circular orbit, almost circular orbit inclined to the ecliptic about 27°. Escape speed is about 5.6 m/s so that one could almost jump and leave the body. The gravity field at the surface is only about 4% from Deimos, about 3% from the Sun and the remainder from Mars. Its field disappears a bit short of 11 km from the surface. | ||
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Revision as of 12:02, 28 July 2024
Deimos is the smaller and outermost moon of Mars. Deimos was discovered by Asaph Hall at the United States Naval Observatory on 12 August 1877. Henry Madan suggested the name Deimos from Greek mythology.
Deimos in Orbiter
Deimos has been a part of Orbiter since at least the release of Orbiter 2001.
It is a sort of potato shaped body about 16 × 12 × 10 km in size, and is tidally locked so that the same side always faces Mars. It's about 2345 km from Mars in an almost circular orbit, almost circular orbit inclined to the ecliptic about 27°. Escape speed is about 5.6 m/s so that one could almost jump and leave the body. The gravity field at the surface is only about 4% from Deimos, about 3% from the Sun and the remainder from Mars. Its field disappears a bit short of 11 km from the surface.
List of Orbiter versions which include Deimos.
Add-on | Source | Version | Author | Type | Release Date | Compatibility | Wiki article |
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Orbiter 2001 | O-F Resources | 010503 | martins | Orbiter Download | 3 May 2001 | Orbiter 2001 |
Gallery
See also
This natural satellite related article is a stub. You can help Orbiterwiki by expanding it.
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