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Naming of natural satellites

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The naming of natural satellites has been the responsibility of the IAU's committee for Planetary System Nomenclature since 1973. That committee is known today as the Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature (WGPSN).

Prior to its formation, the names of satellites have had varying histories. The choice of names is often determined by a satellite's discoverer; however, historically some satellites were not given names for many decades or even centuries after their discovery.

Contents

[edit] Naming of satellites by planet

[edit] Mars

The moons of Mars (Phobos and Deimos) were named by Asaph Hall in 1878, soon after he discovered them.

[edit] Jupiter

The Galilean moons of Jupiter (Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto) were named by Simon Marius soon after their discovery in 1610. However, by the late 19th century these names had fallen out of favor, and for a long time (until the mid 20th century) it was most common to refer to them in the astronomical literature simply as "Jupiter I", "Jupiter II", etc., or as "the first satellite of Jupiter", "Jupiter's second satellite", etc.

The moons of Jupiter discovered between 1904 and 1951 were not named until 1975, being known until then simply by their Roman numeral designations (Jupiter VI through Jupiter XII). The moon Amalthea (Jupiter V), discovered in 1892, was unofficially named but its name was also not made official until 1975. Since the names of the Galilean satellites themselves had fallen out of favor, it is perhaps not unusual that the discoverers of the new smaller satellites did not see fit to name them either.

Most likely Charles Kowal's discovery of Leda (Jupiter XIII) in 1974 finally prompted the International Astronomical Union to establish a formal nomenclature process. Under the new process, informal names given to seven of the satellites were abandoned in favor of new names. [1]

Number Unofficial name (pre-1975) Official name (since 1975)
Jupiter V Amalthea Amalthea
Jupiter VI Hestia Himalia
Jupiter VII Hera Elara
Jupiter VIII Poseidon Pasiphaë
Jupiter IX Hades Sinope
Jupiter X Demeter Lysithea
Jupiter XI Pan Carme
Jupiter XII Adrastea Ananke

Current practice is that newly discovered moons of Jupiter must be named after lovers of the mythological Jupiter (Zeus). A convention has also emerged among the outer moons, whereby prograde moons are given names ending in 'a' or 'o', and retrograde moons receive names ending in 'e'. In 2004, with new Jovian moons continuing to be discovered, these rules were found to be excessively restrictive, and so the IAU agreed to permit moons to be named after Zeus's descendants as well.

[edit] Saturn

The seven known moons (at the time) of Saturn were named in 1847 by John Herschel. Herschel's system was to name Saturn's moons after the mythological Greek Titans. Until then, Titan was known as the "Huygenian (or Huyghenian) satellite of Saturn" and the other moons had Roman numeral designations in order of their distance from Saturn. Subsequent discoverers of Saturnian moons followed Herschel's scheme: Hyperion was discovered soon after in 1848; the ninth moon, Phoebe was named by its discoverer in 1899 soon after its discovery; and the name of Janus was suggested by its discoverer, Audouin Dollfus.

Current IAU practice for newly discovered inner moons is to continue with Herschel's system, naming them after Titans or their descendants. However, the increasing number of moons that were being discovered in the 21st century caused the IAU to draw up a new scheme for the outer moons, which are named after giants in the mythologies of other cultures. Since the outer moons fall naturally into three groups, one group is named after Norse giants, one after Gallic giants, and one after Inuit giants. The only moon that fails to fit this scheme is the Greek-named Phoebe, which is in the Norse group.

[edit] Uranus

The first two Uranian moons, discovered in 1787, did not receive names until 1852, a year after two more moons had been discovered. The responsibility for naming was taken by John Herschel, son of the discoverer of Uranus. Herschel broke with tradition: instead of assigning names from Greek mythology, he named the moons after magical spirits in English literature: Oberon and Titania from William Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream, and Ariel and Umbriel from Alexander Pope's The Rape of the Lock.

Subsequent naming choices have accorded with Herschel's choices. In 1949, the fifth moon, Miranda, was named by its discoverer after a character in Shakespeare's The Tempest. Current IAU practice is to name moons after characters from Shakespeare's plays and The Rape of the Lock (although the names from Shakespeare far outnumber those from Pope). At first, the outermost moons were all named after characters from one play, The Tempest; but with Margaret being named from Much Ado About Nothing that trend has ended.

[edit] Neptune

The one known moon (at the time) of Neptune was not named for many decades. Although the name Triton was suggested in 1880, it did not come into general use until the mid 20th-century. In the astronomical literature it was simply referred to as "the satellite of Neptune". Later, the second known moon, Nereid, was named by its discoverer in 1949 soon after its discovery.

Current IAU practice for newly discovered Neptunian moons is to accord with these first two choices by naming them after Greek sea deities.

[edit] Pluto

The name of Pluto moon Charon was suggested by James W. Christy, its discoverer, soon after its discovery.

As of June 22 2006, the other two moons are named Hydra and Nix.

[edit] Eris

The name of Eris's moon Dysnomia was suggested by its discoverer Michael E. Brown, who also suggested the name of the dwarf planet. The names were accepted by the IAU on 14 September 2006.

[edit] Roman numeral designations

The Roman numbering system for satellites arose with the very first discovery of natural satellites other than Earth's Moon: Galileo referred to the Galilean moons as I through IV (counting from Jupiter outward), in part to spite his rival Simon Marius, who had proposed the names now adopted. Similar numbering schemes naturally arose with the discovery of moons around Saturn, Uranus, and Mars. The numbers initially designated the moons in orbital sequence, and were re-numbered after each new discovery; for instance, before the discovery of Mimas and Enceladus in 1789, Tethys was Saturn I, Dione Saturn II, etc.<ref>Account of the Discovery of a Sixth and Seventh Satellite of the Planet Saturn; with Remarks on the Construction of its Ring, its Atmosphere, its Rotation on an Axis, and its spheroidical Figure</ref>, but after the new moons were discovered, Mimas became Saturn I, Enceladus Saturn II, Tethys Saturn III and Dione Saturn IV.

After the mid-to-late nineteenth century, however, the numeration became fixed, and later discoveries failed to conform with the orbital sequence scheme. Amalthea, discovered in 1892, was labelled "Jupiter V" although it orbits closer to Jupiter than does Io (Jupiter I). The unstated convention then became, at the close of the 19th century, that the numbers more or less reflected the order of discovery, except for prior historical exceptions (see the Timeline of discovery of Solar System planets and their natural satellites); though if a large number of satellites were discovered in a short span of time, the group could be numbered in orbital sequence, or according to other principles than strictly by order of discovery. The convention has been extended to natural satellites of minor planets, such as (87) Sylvia I Romulus.

Roman numerals are usually not assigned to satelllites until they are named, so many satellites that have been discovered but only have provisional designations do not have Roman numerals assigned to them. Since the International Astronomical Union began assigning names to all satellites in 1975, the use of Roman numeral designations has diminished, and some are very rarely used; Phobos and Deimos are rarely referred to as Mars I and Mars II, and the Moon is never referred to as "Earth I".

[edit] Table of natural satellites by Roman numeral

(with year of discovery and actual order of distance)

Roman
numeral
Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune Pluto
I Phobos 1877 Io 1610 5Mimas 17898 Ariel 185115 Triton 18467 Charon 1978
II Deimos 1877 Europa 1610 6Enceladus 178911 Umbriel 185116 Nereid 19498 Nix 2005
III Ganymede 1610 7Tethys 168412 Titania 178717 Naiad 19891 Hydra 2005
IV Callisto 1610 8Dione 168415 Oberon 178718 Thalassa 19892
V Amalthea 1892 3Rhea 167218 Miranda 194814 Despina 19893
VI Himalia 1904 11Titan 165519 Cordelia 19861 Galatea 19894
VII Elara 1905 13Hyperion 184820 Ophelia 19862 Larissa 19895
VIII Pasiphae 1908 52 Iapetus 167121 Bianca 19863 Proteus 19896
IX Sinope 1914 58 Phoebe 189924 Cressida 19864
X Lysithea 1938 12Janus 19807 Desdemona 19865 Psamathe 200312
XI Carme 193845 Epimetheus 19806 Juliet 19866
XII Ananke 195131 Helene 198015a Portia 19867
XIII Leda 197410Telesto 198012a Rosalind 19868
XIV Thebe 19794Calypso 198012b Belinda 198610
XV Adrastea 1979 2Atlas 19803 Puck 198512
XVI Metis 1979 1Prometheus 19804 Caliban 199720
XVII Callirrhoe 199946 Pandora 19805 Sycorax 199723
XVIII Themisto 2000 9Pan 19901 Prospero 199925
XIX Megaclite 200162 Ymir 200054 Setebos 199926
XX Taygete 200135 Paaliaq 200025 Stephano 199921
XXI Chaldene 200137 Tarvos 200036 Trinculo 200222
XXII Harpalyke 200027 Ijiraq 200023 Francisco 200319
XXIII Kalyke 200144 Suttungr 200042 Margaret 200324
XXIV Iocaste 200124 Kiviuq 200022 Ferdinand 200327
XXV Erinome 200141 Mundilfari 200037 Perdita 200311
XXVI Isonoe 200155 Albiorix 200027 Mab 200313
XXVII Praxidike 200126 Skathi 200026 Cupid 20039
XXVIII Autonoe 200260 Erriapo 200029
XXIX Thyone 200230 Siarnaq 200031
XXX Hermippe 200229 Thrymr 200046
XXXI Aitne 200233 Narvi 200341
XXXII Eurydome 200247 Methone 20049
XXXIII Euanthe 200221 Pallene 200410
XXXIV Euporie 200217 Polydeuces 200415b
XXXV Orthosie 200223 Daphnis 20052
XXXVI Sponde 200259
XXXVII Kale 200234
XXXVIII Pasithee 200248
XXXIX Hegemone 200353
XL Mneme 200328
XLI Aoede 200342
XLII Thelxinoe 200420
XLIII Arche 200254
XLIV Kallichore 200343
XLV Helike 200322
XLVI Carpo 200315
XLVII Eukelade 200350
XLVIII Cyllene 200349

[edit] Recent developments

As of the IAU General Assembly in July 2004 [2], the WGPSN:

  • named 34 satellites of Jupiter and Saturn and one Uranus satellite, bringing the total number of known planetary satellites to 101, with over two dozen more awaiting recovery and naming;
  • suggested it may become advisable to not name small satellites (current CCD technology makes it possible to discover satellites as small as 1 km);
  • allowed Jovian satellites to be named for Zeus' descendants in addition to his lovers and favorites which were the previous source of names;
  • allowed satellites of Saturn to have names of giants and monsters in mythologies other than the Greco-Roman, including (so far) Gallic, Inuit and Norse.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

<references/>

Solar System Natural Satellites

v  d  e</div>

     Planetary satellites: TerranMartianJovianSaturnianUranianNeptunian
     Other satellite systems: PlutonianEridianAsteroid satellites
     Largest satellites: GanymedeTitanCallistoIoEarth's MoonEuropaTriton
TitaniaRheaOberonIapetusCharonUmbrielArielDioneTethys
 See also: inner satellitestrojansirregularslist by diameterdiscovery timelinenaming
nl:Lijst betekenis namen hemellichamen

zh:卫星的命名

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