Thalassa
0 sources
Thalassa
Summary
Thalassa is a moon of Neptune[1]. Thalassa draws 33 Wikipedia views per month (moon_of_neptune category, ranking #13 of 15).[2]
Key Facts
- Thalassa is credited with the discovery of Richard J. Terrile[3].
- Thalassa is credited with the discovery of Voyager 2[4].
- Thalassa's image is recorded as Neptune Trio.jpg[5].
- Thalassa's instance of is recorded as moon of Neptune[6].
- Thalassa is named after Thalassa[7].
- Thalassa's Commons category is recorded as Thalassa (moon)[8].
- Thalassa's parent astronomical body is recorded as Neptune[9].
- Thalassa's provisional designation is recorded as S/1989 N 5[10].
- Thalassa's time of discovery or invention is recorded as +1989-09-18T00:00:00Z[11].
- Thalassa's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/02rfgk[12].
- Thalassa's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Thalassa (moon)[13].
- Thalassa's Commons gallery is recorded as Thalassa[14].
- Thalassa's orbital eccentricity is recorded as {'amount': '+0.00176'}[15].
- Thalassa's apparent magnitude is recorded as {'amount': '+23.3'}[16].
- Thalassa's orbital inclination is recorded as {'unit': 'Q28390', 'amount': '+0.21'}[17].
- Thalassa's mass is recorded as {'unit': 'Q2655272', 'amount': '+370'}[18].
- Thalassa's temperature is recorded as {'unit': 'Q11579', 'amount': '+51'}[19].
- Thalassa's radius is recorded as {'unit': 'Q828224', 'amount': '+41'}[20].
- Thalassa's orbital period is recorded as {'unit': 'Q573', 'amount': '+0.31148444'}[21].
- Thalassa's semi-major axis of an orbit is recorded as {'unit': 'Q828224', 'amount': '+50075'}[22].
- Thalassa's name is recorded as {'lang': 'ca', 'text': 'Neptú IV'}[23].
- Thalassa's NAIF ID is recorded as 804[24].
- Thalassa's Quora topic ID is recorded as Thalassa[25].
- Thalassa's albedo is recorded as {'amount': '+0.09'}[26].
- Thalassa's Hrvatska enciklopedija ID is recorded as 68448[27].
Body
Works and Contributions
Credited discoveries include Richard J. Terrile[3], an astronomer[28], b. 1951[29], of United States[30] and Voyager 2[4], a flyby probe[31].
Why It Matters
Thalassa draws 33 Wikipedia views per month (moon_of_neptune category, ranking #13 of 15).[2] Thalassa has Wikipedia articles in 28 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[32] Thalassa is known by 9 alternative names across languages and contexts.[33]