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| Click image for description | |||||||
| Discovery | |||||||
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| Discovered by | W. Herschel | ||||||
| Discovered in | January 11, 1787 | ||||||
| Orbital characteristics | |||||||
| Mean radius | 583519 km | ||||||
| Eccentricity | ~0.0016 | ||||||
| Orbital period | 13.463234d | ||||||
| Inclination | ~0.7° | ||||||
| Is a satellite of | Uranus | ||||||
| Physical characteristics | |||||||
| Mean diameter | 1522.8 km | ||||||
| Surface area | km2 | ||||||
| Mass | 3.014×1021 kg | ||||||
| Mean density | 1.63 g/cm3 | ||||||
| Surface gravity | 0.346 m/s2 | ||||||
| Rotation period | ? | ||||||
| Axial tilt | ?° | ||||||
| Albedo | 0.24 | ||||||
| Surface temp. |
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| Atmospheric pressure | 0 kPa | ||||||
Oberon ("OH ber on) is the outermost of the major moons of the planet Uranus. It was discovered on January 11, 1787 by William Herschel.
The name "Oberon" and the names of all four satellites of Uranus then known were suggested by Herschel's son John Herschel in 1852 at the request of William Lassell, who had discovered Ariel and Umbriel the year before. Lassell had earlier endorsed Herschel's 1847 naming scheme for the seven then-known satellites of Saturn and had named his newly-discovered eighth satellite Hyperion in accordance with Herschel's naming scheme in 1848.
All of the moons of Uranus are named for characters from Shakespeare or Alexander Pope. Oberon was named after Oberon, the king of the Faeries in A Midsummer Night's Dream.
Oberon is composed of roughly 50% water ice, 30% silicate rock, and 20% methane-related carbon/nitrogen compounds. It has an old, heavily cratered, and icy surface which shows shows little evidence of internal activity other than some unknown dark material that apparently covers the floors of many craters.
Scientists recognise only two types of geological feature on Oberon: craters and chasmata. See List of geological features on Oberon.
| Uranus |
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| Puck's group | Miranda | Ariel | Umbriel |
| Titania | Oberon | Sycorax' group | S/2003 U 3 |
| (For other moons, see: Uranus' natural satellites) |