S/2002 N 5
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S/2002 N 5
Summary
S/2002 N 5 is an irregular moon[1]. It draws 43 Wikipedia views per month (irregular_moon category, ranking #1 of 1).[2]
Key Facts
- S/2002 N 5 is credited with the discovery of Matthew J. Holman[3].
- S/2002 N 5 is credited with the discovery of John J. Kavelaars[4].
- S/2002 N 5 is credited with the discovery of Tommy Grav[5].
- S/2002 N 5 is credited with the discovery of Wes Fraser[6].
- S/2002 N 5's image is recorded as S-2002 N 5 VLT-FORS1 2002-09-03 annotated.gif[7].
- S/2002 N 5's instance of is recorded as irregular moon[8].
- S/2002 N 5's site of astronomical discovery is recorded as Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory[9].
- S/2002 N 5's Commons category is recorded as S/2002 N 5[10].
- S/2002 N 5's parent astronomical body is recorded as Neptune[11].
- S/2002 N 5's time of discovery or invention is recorded as +2002-08-14T00:00:00Z[12].
- S/2002 N 5's has characteristic is recorded as prograde motion[13].
- S/2002 N 5's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/11y35cm0gh[14].
- S/2002 N 5's Fandom article ID is recorded as thesolarsystem:S/2002_N_5[15].
Body
Works and Contributions
Credited discoveries include Matthew J. Holman[3], an astronomer[16], b. 1967[17], of United States[18], awarded the Newcomb Cleveland Prize[19], specialised in astronomy[20]; John J. Kavelaars[4], an astronomer[21], b. 1966[22], of Canada[23]; Tommy Grav[5], an astronomer[24], b. 1973[25], of Norway[26]; and Wes Fraser[6], an astronomer[27], b. 2000[28], of Canada[29].
Why It Matters
S/2002 N 5 draws 43 Wikipedia views per month (irregular_moon category, ranking #1 of 1).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 9 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[30]