Uranus I
Ariel [AIR-ee-al] is a relatively small satellite and is the brightest moon of Uranus. The surface is pock-marked with craters, but the most outstanding features are long rift valleys stretching across the entire surface. Canyons much like the ones on Mars appear in the pictures. The canyon floors appear as though they have been smoothed by a fluid. The fluid could not have been water because water acts like steel at these temperatures. The flow marks might have been made by ammonia, methane or even carbon monoxide.
Discovered by ............................... William Lassell Date of discovery ...................................... 1851 Mass (kg) .......................................... 1.27e+21 Mass (Earth = 1) ................................. 2.1252e-04 Equatorial radius (km) ................................ 578.9 Equatorial radius (Earth = 1) .................... 9.0765e-02 Mean density (gm/cm^3) ................................. 1.56 Mean distance from Uranus (km) ...................... 191,240 Rotational period (days) ........................... 2.520379 Orbital period (days) .............................. 2.520379 Mean orbital velocity (km/sec) ......................... 5.52 Orbital eccentricity ................................. 0.0034 Orbital inclination .................................... 0.31° Escape Velocity (km/sec) .............................. 0.541 Visual geometric albedo ................................ 0.34 Magnitude (Vo) ........................................ 14.16