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Triton Triton
("TRY ton") is the seventh and by far the largest of Neptune's
satellites: Discovered by Lassell in 1846 only a few weeks after the
discovery of Neptune itself. In Greek mythology, Triton is a god of the
sea, the son of Poseidon (Neptune); usually portrayed as having the head
and trunk of a man and the tail of a fish. Neptune is a beautiful planet,
check it out:
Triton Gallery Triton's
orbit is retrograde. It is the only large moon to orbit "backwards",
the only other moons with retrograde orbits are Jupiter's moons Ananke,
Carme, Pasiphae and Sinope and Saturn's Phoebe all of which are less
than 1/10 the diameter of Triton. Triton could not have condensed from
the primordial Solar Nebula in this configuration; it must have formed
elsewhere (perhaps in the Kuiper Belt?) and later been captured by Neptune
(perhaps involving a collision with another now shattered Neptunian moon).
A capture scenario could account not only for Triton's orbit but also
for the unusual orbit of Nereid and provide the energy needed to melt
and differentiate Triton's interior.
Because of its retrograde orbit, tidal interactions between Neptune and Triton remove energy from Triton thus lowering its orbit. At some very distant future time it will either break up (perhaps forming a ring) or crash into Neptune. The unusual nature of Triton's orbit, the similarity of bulk properties between Pluto and Triton, and the highly eccentric, Neptune-crossing nature of Pluto's orbit suggest some historical connection between them. Exactly what this might be is purely conjecture at this time however.
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