Iapetus
Saturn IV
Iapetus Facts
- Iapetus is the seventeenth of Saturn's known
satellites and the third largest:
- distance from Saturn: 3,561,300 km
- diameter: 1460 km
- mass: 1.88e21 kg
- Pronounced "eye AP i tus"
- In Greek mythology Iapetus was a Titan, the son of Uranus, the father
of Prometheus and Atlas and an ancestor of the human race.
- Discovered by Cassini in 1671.
- With a density of only 1.1, Iapetus must be composed almost entirely of water
ice.
- The leading
and trailing hemispheres of Iapetus are
radically different. The albedo of the leading hemisphere is between .03 and
.05, as dark as lampblack, whereas the trailing hemisphere's albedo is .5,
almost as bright as Europa.
This difference is
so striking that Cassini noted that he could
see Iapetus only on one side of Saturn and not on
the other.
- One explanation of this is that the leading hemisphere is dusted with a coating
of material knocked off of Phoebe. However, the
color of the leading half of Iapetus and that of Phoebe don't quite match.
Another possibility is that some active process within Iapetus is responsible.
The puzzle is compounded by the fact that the dividing line
between the two sides is inexplicably sharp.
- All of Saturn's moons except for Iapetus and
Phoebe are very nearly in the plane of Saturn's
equator. Iapetus is inclined almost 15 degrees.
Pictures
- (above) Iapetus grainy, low res
86k gif;
13k jpg
Iapetus grainy, low res
120k gif
- Iapetus, moon of Saturn, partial phase
147k gif
- Iapetus, moon of Saturn, closer view B&W
142k gif
More about Iapetus
Open Issues
- Why are the two hemispheres so different?
- Why is Iapetus's orbit not in the plane of the other moons?
... Saturn
... Hyperion
... Iapetus
... Phoebe
...
Bill Arnett; last updated:
1994 September 21