Belinda (moon)

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Belinda
Discovery
Discovered by: Stephen P. Synnott / Voyager 2
Discovery date: January 13, 1986
Orbital characteristics
Mean radius of orbit: 75,255.613 ± 0.057 km[1]
Eccentricity: 0.00007 ± 0.000073[1]
Orbital period: 0.623527470 ± 0.000000017 d[1]
Inclination: 0.03063 ± 0.028° (to Uranus' equator)[1]
Satellite of: Uranus
Physical characteristics
Dimensions: 128 × 64 × 64 km[2]
Mean radius: 45 ± 8 km[2]
Surface area: ~25,000 km²[3]
Volume: ~380,000 km³[3]
Mass: ~4.9×1017 kg[3]
Mean density: ~1.3 g/cm³ assumed
Equatorial surface gravity: ~0.014 m/s2[3]
Escape velocity: ~0.034 km/s[3]
Rotation period: synchronous[2]
Axial tilt: zero[2]
Albedo: 0.08 ± 0.01[4]
Temperature: ~64 K[3]

Belinda is a closer moon to Uranus. Belinda was found from the images taken by Voyager 2 on 1986-01-13, and was given the designation S/1986 U 5.[5] It is named after the heroine of Alexander Pope's The Rape of the Lock. It is also designated Uranus XIV.[6]

Belinda belongs to Portia Group of moons, which also includes Bianca, Cressida, Desdemona, Portia, Juliet, Cupid, Rosalind and Perdita.[4] These moons have similar orbits and photometric properties.[4] Unfortunately, other than its orbit,[1] radius of 45 km[2] and geometric albedo of 0.08[4] almost nothing is known about it.

At the Voyager 2 images Belinda appears as a stretched object, the major axis pointing towards Uranus. The moon is very stretched, with its short axis 0.5 ± 0.1 times the long axis. [2] Its surface is grey in color.[2]

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