Neha Patil (Editor)

Mab (moon)

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Discovery date
  
August 25, 2003

Semi-major axis
  
97,736 km

Average orbital speed
  
7.70 km/s (calculated)

Orbital period
  
22 hours

Orbits
  
Uranus

Alternative names
  
Uranus XXVI (26)

Eccentricity
  
0.0025

Discovered
  
25 August 2003

Absolute magnitude
  
14.5

Apparent magnitude
  
26

Mab (moon) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Discovered by
  
Mark R. Showalter and Jack J. Lissauer

Discoverers
  
Mark Showalter, Jack J. Lissauer

Similar
  
Mark Showalter discoveries, Uranus moons, Other celestial objects

Mab (/ˈmæb/ MAB), or Uranus XXVI (26), is an inner satellite of Uranus. It was discovered by Mark R. Showalter and Jack J. Lissauer in 2003 using the Hubble Space Telescope. It was named after Queen Mab, a fairy queen from English folklore who is mentioned in William Shakespeare's play Romeo and Juliet.

Because the moon is small and dark, it was not seen in the heavily scrutinized images taken by Voyager 2 during its Uranus flyby in 1986. However, it is brighter than another moon, Perdita, which was discovered from Voyager's photos in 1997. This led scientists to re-examine the old photos again, and the satellite was finally found in the images.

The size of Mab is not known exactly. If it is as dark as Puck, it is about 24 km in diameter. On the other hand, if it is brightly coloured like the neighbouring moon Miranda, it would be even smaller than Cupid and comparable to the smallest outer satellites.

Mab is heavily perturbed. The actual source for perturbation is still unclear, but is presumed to be one or more of the nearby orbiting moons.

Mab orbits at the same distance from Uranus as the μ ring (formerly known as R/2003 U 1), a recently discovered dusty ring. The moon is nearly the optimal size for dust production, since larger moons can recollect the escaping dust and smaller moons have too small surface areas for supplying the ring via ring particle or meteoroid collisions. No rings associated with Perdita and Cupid have been found, probably because Belinda limits the lifetimes of dust they generate.

Following its discovery, Mab was given the temporary designation S/2003 U 1. The moon is also designated Uranus XXVI.

References

Mab (moon) Wikipedia