Fenrir
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Fenrir
Summary
Fenrir is a moon of Saturn[1]. Fenrir draws 44 Wikipedia views per month (moon_of_saturn category, ranking #26 of 96).[2]
Key Facts
- Fenrir is credited with the discovery of Scott S. Sheppard[3].
- Fenrir's instance of is recorded as moon of Saturn[4].
- Fenrir's instance of is recorded as irregular moon[5].
- Fenrir's site of astronomical discovery is recorded as Subaru Telescope[6].
- Fenrir is named after Fenrir[7].
- Fenrir's Commons category is recorded as Fenrir (moon)[8].
- Fenrir's parent astronomical body is recorded as Saturn[9].
- Fenrir's provisional designation is recorded as S/2004 S 16[10].
- Fenrir's time of discovery or invention is recorded as +2004-12-13T00:00:00Z[11].
- Fenrir's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0600bd[12].
- Fenrir's orbital eccentricity is recorded as {'amount': '+0.1363'}[13].
- Fenrir's apparent magnitude is recorded as {'amount': '+25.0'}[14].
- Fenrir's Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names ID is recorded as 7031618[15].
- Fenrir's orbital inclination is recorded as {'unit': 'Q28390', 'amount': '+164.955'}[16].
- Fenrir's radius is recorded as {'unit': 'Q828224', 'amount': '+2'}[17].
- Fenrir's orbital period is recorded as {'unit': 'Q573', 'amount': '+1260.35'}[18].
- Fenrir's semi-major axis of an orbit is recorded as {'unit': 'Q828224', 'amount': '+22610716'}[19].
- Fenrir's mean anomaly is recorded as {'unit': 'Q28390', 'amount': '+146.614'}[20].
- Fenrir's NAIF ID is recorded as 641[21].
- Fenrir's albedo is recorded as {'amount': '+0.040'}[22].
Body
Works and Contributions
Fenrir is credited with the discovery of Scott S. Sheppard[3].
Why It Matters
Fenrir draws 44 Wikipedia views per month (moon_of_saturn category, ranking #26 of 96).[2] Fenrir has Wikipedia articles in 22 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[23] Fenrir is known by 10 alternative names across languages and contexts.[24]