Mimas
moon of Saturn
moons of Saturn: Mimas
Mimas, smallest and innermost of the major regular moons of Saturn. It was discovered in 1789 by the English astronomer William Herschel and named for one of the Giants (Gigantes) of Greek mythology.
moons of Saturn: Mimas
Mimas measures about 400 km (250 miles) in diameter and revolves around the planet in a prograde, near-circular orbit at a mean distance of 185,520 km (115,277 miles). Because of tidal interactions with Saturn, the moon rotates synchronously with its orbital motion, always keeping the same hemisphere toward Saturn and always leading with the same hemisphere in orbit.
The mean density of Mimas is only 1.15 times that of water, and its surface is primarily water frost. For these reasons, Mimas is believed to be composed principally of ice. It is very bright, reflecting more than 80 percent of sunlight falling on it. Mimas is believed to be coated with fresh ice particles from the E ring, which originates in the active plumes of Enceladus. Its surface is bright and heavily marked with deep, bowl-shaped impact craters. The depth of the craters appears to be a consequence of the low surface gravity, which apparently is not strong enough to cause slumping. In spite of Mimas’s small size, it shows some evidence of resurfacing, possibly resulting from a partial melting of the icy crust. Its most noteworthy feature is a 130-km- (80-mile-) diameter crater named Herschel, which is near the centre of the leading hemisphere. The crater’s outer walls are 5 km (3 miles) high, its floor 10 km (6 miles) deep, and the central peak 6 km (4 miles) high. Herschel is one of the largest impact structures, relative to the size of the body, known in the solar system. In 2010 the Cassini spacecraft detected a thermal anomaly on Mimas in which the regions heated by the Sun had the coldest surface temperatures. The reason for this anomaly is not yet understood.
Mimas is in an orbital resonance with the more distant Saturnian moon Tethys—its 22.6-hour circuit of Saturn is half that of Tethys—and the two bodies always make their closest approach to each other on the same side of Saturn. Clearly this resonance is not accidental. In general terms, it could have arisen from a gradual process, such as the slowing of Saturn’s rotation because of tidal friction, that—due to conservation of momentum—expanded the orbits of both moons, Mimas’s more than Tethys’s, over geologic time. Mimas also is in orbital resonance with a number of observed structures in Saturn’s ring system. The inner edge of the Cassini division, a prominent gap of lowered particle density in the main rings, has an orbital period close to one-half of that of Mimas, and this gap is thought to be formed at least in part by resonant interactions of ring particles with the moon. Other ring orbits that are in resonance with Mimas display bending waves, tightly wound spiral waves of ring material displaced upward or downward from the ring plane.
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