Ariel

astronomy

Oct 4, 2023 - 08:12
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Ariel, one of the five major moons of Uranus, in a mosaic image made from the most detailed photographs taken by Voyager 2 on Jan. 24, 1986, during its flight through the Uranian system. Small impact craters—near the limit of resolution in this image—pit much of the moon's surface. The most prominent features are scarps and valleys crisscrossing the pitted terrain; some of the valleys are partially filled with material that may have upwelled from the moon's interior.

Ariel, second nearest of the five major moons of Uranus. It was discovered in 1851 by William Lassell, an English astronomer, and bears the name of characters in Alexander Pope’s poem The Rape of the Lock and William Shakespeare’s play The Tempest.

Ariel revolves around Uranus at a mean distance of 190,900 km (118,620 miles) from the centre of the planet, taking 2.52 days to complete one orbit. Like the other large Uranian moons, Ariel rotates synchronously with its orbital period, keeping the same face toward the planet and the same face forward in its orbit. The moon’s mean diameter is about 1,160 km (720 miles). Its density of about 1.59 grams per cubic cm is consistent with a composition of roughly equal parts water ice and rock, perhaps intermixed with a small amount of frozen methane.

Photographs taken by the U.S. Voyager 2 spacecraft during its flyby of the Uranian system in 1986 show that Ariel’s surface is crisscrossed with scarps and long valleylike formations. Some of the latter are partially filled with materials that may have upwelled from the moon’s interior as a result of tectonic activity in the past. In a few cases, ice appears to have spread out from the valleys across broad plains, much like glacier flows on Earth. These features and the paucity of large impact craters suggest that Ariel has the youngest surface of all of Uranus’s major moons.

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