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  2. Geology of Triton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geology_of_Triton

    The geology of Triton encompasses the physical characteristics of the surface, internal structure, and geological history of Neptune's largest moon Triton. With a mean density of 2.061 g/cm 3 , [ 1 ] Triton is roughly 15-35% water ice by mass; Triton is a differentiated body, with an icy solid crust atop a probable subsurface ocean and a rocky ...

  3. Triton (moon) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triton_(moon)

    Triton's surface area is 23 million km 2, which is 4.5% of Earth, or 15.5% of Earth's land area. Triton has an unusually high albedo, reflecting 60–95% of the sunlight that reaches it, and it has changed only slightly since the first

  4. List of Solar System objects by size - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Solar_System...

    Surface area Density Gravity [note 3] Type Discovery (R ... Triton Neptune I: 1 353.4 ...

  5. List of geological features on Triton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_geological...

    Geological map of Triton, with some major surface features labelled in the upper map. This is a list of named geological features on Triton. Catenae (crater chains)

  6. Slidr Sulci - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slidr_Sulci

    Slidr Sulci is a major tectonic fault on Neptune's largest moon Triton. It crosses a wide variety of terrains on Triton, most prominently the cantaloupe terrain, an unusually-textured region resembling the skin of a North American cantaloupe. The fault is named after the River Sliðr of Norse mythology, whose waters in Hel are filled with swords.

  7. Atmosphere of Triton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atmosphere_of_Triton

    The proposed mechanism for the formation of dust devils is that patches of the surface without nitrogen frost would heat up more quickly than the surrounding area. Given this and Triton's low surface pressure, the atmosphere would begin to heat up due to convection, to as much as 10 K greater than the surface temperature, allowing for the ...

  8. Winter weather interrupts some holiday weekend travel

    www.aol.com/news/winter-weather-interrupts...

    BREAKING NEWS: We expect to screen nearly 40M people from Dec. 19 - Jan. 2, a 6.2% increase from last year. #TeamTSA is prepared to handle the high travel volumes. Busiest days will be 12/20, 12/ ...

  9. Surface gravity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surface_gravity

    The surface gravity of a white dwarf is very high, and of a neutron star even higher. A white dwarf's surface gravity is around 100,000 g (10 6 m/s 2) whilst the neutron star's compactness gives it a surface gravity of up to 7 × 10 12 m/s 2 with typical values of order 10 12 m/s 2 (that is more than 10 11 times that of Earth).