Janus
Saturn X
Janus Facts
- Janus is the sixth of Saturn's known satellites:
- distance from Saturn: 151,472 km
- diameter: 178 km (196 x 192 x 150)
- mass: 2.01e18 kg
a.k.a. 1980 S 1
- Pronounced "JAY nus"
- Janus was the god of gates and doorways, depicted with two faces
looking in opposite directions; also the root of the English word
"January".
- Discovered by the French astronomer Audouin Dollfus in 1966.
- Dollfus is credited with the discovery of Janus but it's not really
certain whether the object he saw was Janus or
Epimetheus. Larson
and Fountain determined in 1978 that there are in fact two moons
at about 151000 km from Saturn. It was not until the
Voyager spacecraft arrived in 1980
that accurate positions were obtained to distinguish the two.
- Janus and Epimetheus
are "co-orbital".
The orbital radii of Janus and Epimetheus differ by only 50 km, less than
the diameter of either. Their orbital velocities are thus very nearly
equal and the lower, faster one slowly overtakes the other. As they
approach each other they exchange a bit of momentum the end result
of which is to boost the lower one into a higher orbit and to drop the
higher one to a lower orbit. They thus exchange places. The exchange
takes place about once every four years. The orbital data given
here is as of the time of the Voyager encounters.
- Janus is extensively cratered with several craters larger than 30 km but few
linear features.
Its surface appears to be older than
Prometheus's but younger than
Pandora's.
Pictures
- (above) Janus 43k gif
- Janus low res 14k gif
Janus 15k gif
- Map of Janus
102k gif
More about Janus
Open Issues
- Little is known about Janus.
- Is the co-orbital relationship with Epimetheus stable?
... Saturn
... Epimetheus
... Janus
... Mimas
...
Bill Arnett; last updated:
1995 February 2