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Hyperion: Analysis of Voyager observations
Authors:P Thomas  J Veverka
Institution:Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853, USA
Abstract:A total of 82 images of Hyperion was returned by the Voyager spacecraft; the most detailed views have a nominal resolution of 8.7 km/line pair. Hyperion had a rotation period of about 13 days and a spin vector lying close to its orbital plane at the time of the Voyager 2 encounter in 1981. The satellite's shape is very irregular, and cannot be approximated suitably by an ellipsoid. The largest cross section (A × C) is about 370 × 225 km; the B × C cross section is approximately 280 × 225 km. Most prominent among the surface features is a 120-km-diameter crater with an estimated depth of 10 km, and a series of arcuate scarps 300 km long that have relief in excess of 5 km. The density of large craters of Hyperion is smaller than that on other small Saturnian satellites and suggests the possibility that the last significant fragmentation of Hyperion occurred near the end of or after initial heavy bombardment. Voyager photometry yields an average normal reflectance of the surface material of 0.21 in the clear filter (0.47 μm) and evidence of slight albedo mottling over the surface. The disk-integrated phase coefficient between phase angles of 22° and 82° is 0.018 mag/de; there is little indication of a strong opposition effect in Voyager data down to phase angles of 3°. Hyperion's average color is definitely redder than that of Phobe, but matches that of the dark material on the leading hemisphere of Iapetus quite well. The satellite's albedo and color are consistent with those of contaminated water ice but since no mass determinations of Hyperion exist we do not know whether the bulk composition is icy or rocky.
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