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The moon, has been included in the Himalia group.
A ring could possibly exist around the moon Himalia's orbit.
It flashed a question to its twin on Himalia, tenth from the planet.
The Himalia group shares an average inclination of 28 .
The species is named after Himalia, a moon of Jupiter.
Himalia appears grey, like the other members of its group, similar to a C-type asteroid.
The satellite was initially included in the Himalia group, but its mean orbital elements were not well determined.
One theory was that it crashed into Himalia, creating a faint ring around Jupiter.
One theory is that it has crashed into the much larger moon Himalia, 170 kilometres in diameter, creating a faint ring.
On December 19, 2000, the spacecraft captured an image of the moon Himalia, but the resolution was too low to show surface details.
Supplies and support borne to Himalia Base.
The sixth moon of Jupiter, later called Himalia, is discovered at Lick Observatory.
The outer moons would be invisible except for Himalia, which would appear as a dim, starlike point at magnitude 5.5.
Elara, Lysithea, Himalia, and Leda were fairly close together, and lying in almost the same plane.
One possible explanation is that a small moon had crashed into Himalia and the force of the impact caused material to blast off Himalia.
December 3 - Charles Dillon Perrine discovers Jupiter's largest irregular satellite, Himalia.
The moon is located midway between the Galilean moons and the first group of prograde irregular moons, called the Himalia group.
With diameter estimated at 58 km Pasiphae is the largest retrograde and third largest irregular satellite after Himalia and Elara.
So far, water ice has been inferred on Phoebe and Nereid and features attributed to aqueous alteration were found on Himalia.
This possible ring appears as a faint streak near Himalia in images from NASA's New Horizons mission to Pluto.
The radius of the parent asteroid was probably about 89 km, only slightly larger than that of Himalia, which retains approximately 87% of the mass of the original body.
In November 2000, the Cassini spacecraft, going to Saturn, made a number of pictures of Himalia, including photos from a distance as close as 4.4 million km.
The probe's cameras measured volcanoes on Io, studied all four Galilean moons in detail, and made long-distance studies of the outer moons Himalia and Elara.
Himalia is named after the nymph Himalia who bore three sons of Zeus (the Greek equivalent of Jupiter).
The Himalia group is a group of prograde irregular satellites of Jupiter that follow similar orbits to Himalia and are thought to have a common origin.