Jupiter LXVIII

Jupiter LXVIII
Discovery images of Jupiter LXVIII from the Cerro Tololo Observatory's Dark Energy Camera on 23 March 2017
Discovery
Discovered byScott Sheppard et al.
Discovery date2017
Designations
Designation
Jupiter LXVIII
S/2017 J 7
Orbital characteristics[1]
Epoch 2026-01-01
Observation arc1 year
2018-05-17 (last obs)[2]
Periapsis17.1 million km
Apoapsis25.7 million km
(2026-May-21)[3]
20.2 million km
Eccentricity0.193
−632.3 days
82°
Inclination144.6°
347°
336°
Satellite ofJupiter
GroupAnanke group
Physical characteristics
2 km[4]
23.6
16.6 (18 obs)[2]

Jupiter LXVIII, provisionally known as S/2017 J 7, is an outer natural satellite of Jupiter. It was discovered by Scott S. Sheppard and his team in 2017, but not announced until July 17, 2018, via a Minor Planet Electronic Circular from the Minor Planet Center.[5] It is about 2 kilometers in diameter[4] and orbits at a semi-major axis of about 20.2 million km with an inclination of about 144.6°. It belongs to the Ananke group.

It only has a 1 14 year observation arc with 18 observations. It will next come to apojove (farthest distance from Jupiter) on 21 May 2026 when it will be 0.166 AU (24.8 million km; 15.4 million mi) from Jupiter.[3]

References

  1. ^ Horizons output. "Jovian Osculating Orbital Elements for 2017J7 (568)". Retrieved 2026-02-17.
  2. ^ a b MPC Natural Satellites (Select: Orbital Elements)
  3. ^ a b "Apojove on 2026-May-21". JPL Horizons. Retrieved 2026-02-17.
  4. ^ a b S.S. Sheppard (2019), Moons of Jupiter, Carnegie Science, on line
  5. ^ "MPEC 2018-O15 : S/2017 J 7". Minor Planet Center. International Astronomical Union. Retrieved 17 July 2018.