'Hydra' is the outer-most
natural satellite of
Pluto. It was discovered along with
Nix in June, 2005 by the
Hubble Space Telescope's Pluto Companion Search Team, which is composed of
Hal A. Weaver,
Alan Stern,
Max J. Mutchler,
Andrew J. Steffl,
Marc W. Buie,
William J. Merline,
John R. Spencer,
Eliot F. Young, and
Leslie A. Young. The discovery images were taken on
May 15,
2005 and
May 18,
2005; the moons were independently discovered by Max J. Mutchler on
June 15,
2005 and Andrew J. Steffl on
August 15,
2005. The discoveries were announced on
October 31,
2005, after confirmation by
precoveries from 2002. The moons were provisionally
designated 'S/2005 P 1' (Hydra) and 'S/2005 P 2' (Nix).
[3]
The satellite orbits the
barycenter of the system in the same plane as
Charon and Nix, at a distance of about 65,000 km. Unlike other satellites of Pluto, its orbit is only nearly circular; its
eccentricity of 0.0052 is small, but significantly non-zero. Its orbital period of 38.2 days is close to a 1:6
orbital resonance with Charon, with the timing discrepancy being 0.3%. Whether this is a true resonance awaits more detailed determinations of its orbit, in particular its rate of precession. If there is no true resonance, a hypothesis to explain the near-resonance is that it originated before the outward migration of Charon following the formation of all three known moons, and is maintained by the periodic local fluctuation of 5% in the Pluto-Charon gravitational field strength.

Discovery images of Hydra.
Although its size has not been directly measured, calculations based on its brightness give it a diameter of between 40 km, if its
reflectivity is similar to Charon's 35 percent, and about 130 km, if it has a reflectivity of 4 percent like the darkest
Kuiper belt objects (KBOs). At the time of discovery, Hydra was about 25 percent brighter than its sister moon Nix, which led to the assumption that its diameter was some 10 percent larger. However, in subsequent observations the two moons were about equal in brightness. This is likely due to an oblong shape, although brightness variation over its surface may also be responsible. Hydra appears to be
spectrally neutral like Charon and probably Nix, but unlike Pluto, which is reddish.
Hydra is to be visited along with Pluto by the ''
New Horizons'' mission in
2015.
The name ''Hydra'' was announced on
June 21,
2006, in IAU Circular 8723
[4], along with the formal designation 'Pluto III'. It was named after
Hydra, the
monster who guarded the waters of
Pluto/
Hades's underworld in
Greco-Roman Mythology.
External links
★
Hydra Profile by
NASA's Solar System Exploration
★
Background Information Regarding Our Two Newly Discovered Satellites of Pluto – The discoverers' website
★
NASA's Hubble Reveals Possible New Moons Around Pluto – Hubble press release
★
Two More Moons Discovered Orbiting Pluto (SPACE.com)
★
Pluto's Newest Moons Named Hydra and Nix (SPACE.com)
★
Hydra at ESA/Hubble
References
1. ''Orbits and Photometry of Pluto's satellites: Charon, S/2005 P1, and S/2005 P2'' [sic], Buie, M. W., , , Astronomical Journal, 2006 (Final preprint)
2. Based on the range of diameters from Buie ''et al.'' (2006), and densities ranging from 1 g/cm³ (ice) to 2 g/cm³ (Pluto).
3. IAU Circular No. 8625 describing the discovery
4. IAU Circular No. 8723 naming the moons
#
New Constraints on Additional Satellites of the Pluto System, Steffl, A. J., , , The Astronomical Journal, 2006 (Final preprint)
# The Discovery of Two New Satellites of Pluto, Weaver, H. A., , , Nature, 2006