Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ganymede_(moon)> ?p ?o }
- Ganymede_(moon) surfaceArea "8.7E7".
- Ganymede_(moon) volume "7.04E-11".
- Ganymede_(moon) abstract "Ganymede /ˈɡænᵻmiːd/ (Jupiter III) is the largest moon of Jupiter and in the Solar System, and the only moon known to have a magnetosphere. It is the seventh satellite outward from Jupiter and third of the Galilean moons, the first group of objects discovered orbiting another planet. Ganymede orbits Jupiter in roughly seven days and is in a 1:2:4 orbital resonance with the moons Europa and Io, respectively. Ganymede has a diameter of 5,268 km (3,273 mi), 8% larger than the planet Mercury, but its mass is only 45% that of Mercury. Ganymede is 2% larger than Saturn's Titan, the Solar System's second-largest moon. At 2.02 times the mass of the Moon, it is the most massive planetary satellite. It is the ninth-largest object in the Solar System, and the largest without a substantial atmosphere.Ganymede is composed of approximately equal amounts of silicate rock and water ice. It is a fully differentiated body with an iron-rich, liquid core, and an internal ocean that may contain more water than all of Earth's oceans combined. Its surface is composed of two main types of terrain. Dark regions, saturated with impact craters and dated to four billion years ago, cover about a third of the satellite. Lighter regions, crosscut by extensive grooves and ridges and only slightly less ancient, cover the remainder. The cause of the light terrain's disrupted geology is not fully known, but was likely the result of tectonic activity brought about by tidal heating.Ganymede's magnetosphere was probably created through convection within its liquid iron core. The meager magnetosphere is buried within Jupiter's much larger magnetic field and would show only as a local perturbation of the field lines. The satellite has a thin oxygen atmosphere that includes O, O2, and possibly O3 (ozone). Atomic hydrogen is a minor atmospheric constituent. Whether the satellite has an ionosphere associated with its atmosphere is unresolved.Ganymede's discovery is credited to Galileo Galilei, who was the first to observe it on January 7, 1610.The satellite's name was soon suggested by astronomer Simon Marius, for the mythological Ganymede, cupbearer of the Greek gods and Zeus's lover. Beginning with Pioneer 10, spacecraft have been able to examine Ganymede closely. The Voyager probes refined measurements of its size, whereas the Galileo craft discovered its underground ocean and magnetic field. The next planned mission to the Jovian system is the European Space Agency's Jupiter Icy Moon Explorer (JUICE), due to launch in 2022. After flybys of all three icy Galilean moons, the probe is planned to enter orbit around Ganymede.".
- Ganymede_(moon) apparentMagnitude "4.38".
- Ganymede_(moon) apparentMagnitude "4.61".
- Ganymede_(moon) discovered "1610-01-07".
- Ganymede_(moon) discoverer Galileo_Galilei.
- Ganymede_(moon) formerName "Jupiter III".
- Ganymede_(moon) surfaceArea "8.7E13".
- Ganymede_(moon) thumbnail Ganymede_g1_true-edit1.jpg?width=300.
- Ganymede_(moon) volume "0.0704".
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageExternalLink planetarynames.wr.usgs.gov.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageExternalLink profile.cfm?Object=Jup_Ganymede.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageExternalLink TerraformingGanymede2.asp.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageExternalLink ganymede.html.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageExternalLink photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageExternalLink ?IDNumber=PIA03781.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageExternalLink Ganymede.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageExternalLink target.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageExternalLink gany_15ppi.pdf.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageExternalLink 3237.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageExternalLink SSB_059315.pdf.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageExternalLink solarsystem.nasa.gov.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageExternalLink Ganymede.mov.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageExternalLink galileo-4-moons-at-400-years.html.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageExternalLink TerraformingGanymede1.asp.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageExternalLink gchome.shtml.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageExternalLink article.cfm?id=ganymede-new-map.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageExternalLink ganymede_map.jpg.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageExternalLink ganymede.htm.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageID "54211".
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageLength "81174".
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageOutDegree "261".
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageRevisionID "707322332".
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Abiogenesis.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Absorption_band.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Accretion_(astrophysics).
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Airglow.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Albedo.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Allotropes_of_oxygen.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Almost_periodic_function.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Ammonia.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Anat_(crater).
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Apsis.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Ariane_5.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Astrobiology.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Atmosphere.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Aurora.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Axial_tilt.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Bow_shocks_in_astrophysics.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Callisto_(moon).
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Carbon_dioxide.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ganymede_(moon).
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Objects_formerly_considered_planets.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Charged_particle.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Conjunction_(astronomy).
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Convection.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Cryovolcano.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Cyanogen.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Density.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Diatomic_molecule.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Dimer_(chemistry).
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Dipole.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Dissipation.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Dissociation_(chemistry).
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Ecliptic.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Electrical_resistivity_and_conductivity.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Electron.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Electronvolt.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Equator.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Europa_(moon).
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Europa_Jupiter_System_Mission_–_Laplace.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink European_Space_Agency.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Exosphere.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Extreme_ultraviolet.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Field_line.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Field_strength.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Formation_and_evolution_of_the_Solar_System.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink G-force.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Galilean_moons.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Galileo_(spacecraft).
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Galileo_Galilei.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Galileo_Regio.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Gan_De.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Ganymede_(mythology).
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Ganymede_Lander.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Geologic_map.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Gram.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Greek_mythology.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Gregory_Benford.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink H_chondrite.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Heat_flux.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Horst_and_graben.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink House_of_Medici.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Hubble_Space_Telescope.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Hydrogen.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Hydrogen_atom.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Ice.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Impact_crater.
- Ganymede_(moon) wikiPageWikiLink Infrared.