Triton is the largest
natural satellite
A natural satellite is, in the most common usage, an astronomical body that orbits a planet, dwarf planet, or small Solar System body (or sometimes another natural satellite). Natural satellites are colloquially referred to as moons, a deriv ...
of the
planet
A planet is a large, Hydrostatic equilibrium, rounded Astronomical object, astronomical body that is generally required to be in orbit around a star, stellar remnant, or brown dwarf, and is not one itself. The Solar System has eight planets b ...
Neptune
Neptune is the eighth and farthest known planet from the Sun. It is the List of Solar System objects by size, fourth-largest planet in the Solar System by diameter, the third-most-massive planet, and the densest giant planet. It is 17 t ...
. It is the only moon of Neptune massive enough to be
rounded under its own gravity and hosts a
thin, hazy atmosphere. Triton orbits Neptune in a
retrograde orbit—revolving in the opposite direction to the parent planet's rotation—the only large moon in the
Solar System
The Solar SystemCapitalization of the name varies. The International Astronomical Union, the authoritative body regarding astronomical nomenclature, specifies capitalizing the names of all individual astronomical objects but uses mixed "Sola ...
to do so.
Triton is thought to have once been a
dwarf planet
A dwarf planet is a small planetary-mass object that is in direct orbit around the Sun, massive enough to be hydrostatic equilibrium, gravitationally rounded, but insufficient to achieve clearing the neighbourhood, orbital dominance like the ...
from the
Kuiper belt,
captured into Neptune's orbit by the latter's
gravity
In physics, gravity (), also known as gravitation or a gravitational interaction, is a fundamental interaction, a mutual attraction between all massive particles. On Earth, gravity takes a slightly different meaning: the observed force b ...
.
At
in diameter, Triton is the
seventh-largest moon in the Solar System, the second-largest planetary moon in relation to its primary (after Earth's
Moon
The Moon is Earth's only natural satellite. It Orbit of the Moon, orbits around Earth at Lunar distance, an average distance of (; about 30 times Earth diameter, Earth's diameter). The Moon rotation, rotates, with a rotation period (lunar ...
), and larger than all of the known
dwarf planet
A dwarf planet is a small planetary-mass object that is in direct orbit around the Sun, massive enough to be hydrostatic equilibrium, gravitationally rounded, but insufficient to achieve clearing the neighbourhood, orbital dominance like the ...
s. The mean
density
Density (volumetric mass density or specific mass) is the ratio of a substance's mass to its volume. The symbol most often used for density is ''ρ'' (the lower case Greek letter rho), although the Latin letter ''D'' (or ''d'') can also be u ...
is ,
reflecting a composition of approximately 30–45%
water ice by
mass
Mass is an Intrinsic and extrinsic properties, intrinsic property of a physical body, body. It was traditionally believed to be related to the physical quantity, quantity of matter in a body, until the discovery of the atom and particle physi ...
,
with the rest being mostly rock and metal. Triton is differentiated, with a
crust of primarily ice atop a probable
subsurface ocean of liquid water and a solid rocky-metallic
core at its center. Although Triton's orbit is nearly circular with a very low
orbital eccentricity
In astrodynamics, the orbital eccentricity of an astronomical object is a dimensionless parameter that determines the amount by which its orbit around another body deviates from a perfect circle. A value of 0 is a circular orbit, values be ...
of ,
Triton's interior may still experience
tidal heating through obliquity tides.
Triton is one of the most geologically active worlds in the Solar System, with an estimated average surface age of less than 100 million years old. Its surface is covered by
frozen nitrogen and is geologically young, with very few
impact crater
An impact crater is a depression (geology), depression in the surface of a solid astronomical body formed by the hypervelocity impact event, impact of a smaller object. In contrast to volcanic craters, which result from explosion or internal c ...
s. Young, intricate
cryovolcanic and
tectonic
Tectonics ( via Latin ) are the processes that result in the structure and properties of the Earth's crust and its evolution through time. The field of ''planetary tectonics'' extends the concept to other planets and moons.
These processes ...
terrains suggest a complex geological history. The atmosphere of Triton is composed primarily of nitrogen, with minor components of
methane
Methane ( , ) is a chemical compound with the chemical formula (one carbon atom bonded to four hydrogen atoms). It is a group-14 hydride, the simplest alkane, and the main constituent of natural gas. The abundance of methane on Earth makes ...
and
carbon monoxide
Carbon monoxide (chemical formula CO) is a poisonous, flammable gas that is colorless, odorless, tasteless, and slightly less dense than air. Carbon monoxide consists of one carbon atom and one oxygen atom connected by a triple bond. It is the si ...
. Triton's atmosphere is relatively thin and strongly variable, with its atmospheric surface pressure varying by up to a factor of three within the past 30 years. Triton's atmosphere supports clouds of nitrogen ice crystals and a layer of organic atmospheric
haze.
Triton was the first
Neptunian moon to be discovered, on October 10, 1846, by English astronomer
William Lassell. The 1989
flyby of Triton by the ''
Voyager 2''
spacecraft
A spacecraft is a vehicle that is designed spaceflight, to fly and operate in outer space. Spacecraft are used for a variety of purposes, including Telecommunications, communications, Earth observation satellite, Earth observation, Weather s ...
remains the only up-close visit to the moon as of 2025. As the
probe was only able to study about 40% of the moon's surface, multiple concept missions have been developed to revisit Triton. These include a
Discovery
Discovery may refer to:
* Discovery (observation), observing or finding something unknown
* Discovery (fiction), a character's learning something unknown
* Discovery (law), a process in courts of law relating to evidence
Discovery, The Discovery ...
-class
''Trident'' and
New Frontiers-class ''Triton Ocean Worlds Surveyor'' and ''Nautilus''.
Discovery and naming

Triton was discovered by British astronomer
William Lassell on October 10, 1846,
just 17 days after the
discovery of Neptune. When
John Herschel
Sir John Frederick William Herschel, 1st Baronet (; 7 March 1792 – 11 May 1871) was an English polymath active as a mathematician, astronomer, chemist, inventor and experimental photographer who invented the blueprint and did botanical work. ...
received news of Neptune's discovery, he wrote to Lassell suggesting he search for possible moons. Lassell discovered Triton eight days later.
Lassell also claimed for a period to have discovered rings.
Although Neptune was later confirmed to
have rings, they are so faint and dark that it is not plausible he saw them. A brewer by trade, Lassell spotted Triton with his self-built
aperture metal mirror reflecting
telescope
A telescope is a device used to observe distant objects by their emission, Absorption (electromagnetic radiation), absorption, or Reflection (physics), reflection of electromagnetic radiation. Originally, it was an optical instrument using len ...
(also known as the "two-foot" reflector).
This telescope was donated to the
Royal Observatory, Greenwich
The Royal Observatory, Greenwich (ROG; known as the Old Royal Observatory from 1957 to 1998, when the working Royal Greenwich Observatory, RGO, temporarily moved south from Greenwich to Herstmonceux) is an observatory situated on a hill in Gre ...
in the 1880s, but was eventually dismantled.
Triton is named after the Greek sea god
Triton (Τρίτων), the son of
Poseidon (the Greek god corresponding to the Roman
Neptune
Neptune is the eighth and farthest known planet from the Sun. It is the List of Solar System objects by size, fourth-largest planet in the Solar System by diameter, the third-most-massive planet, and the densest giant planet. It is 17 t ...
). The name was first proposed by
Camille Flammarion in his 1880 book ''Astronomie Populaire'',
and was officially adopted many decades later.
Until the discovery of the second moon
Nereid in 1949, Triton was commonly referred to as "the satellite of Neptune". Lassell did not name his discovery; he later successfully suggested the name
Hyperion for the eighth moon of
Saturn
Saturn is the sixth planet from the Sun and the second largest in the Solar System, after Jupiter. It is a gas giant, with an average radius of about 9 times that of Earth. It has an eighth the average density of Earth, but is over 95 tim ...
when he discovered it.
Planetary moons other than Earth's were never given symbols in the astronomical literature. Denis Moskowitz, a software engineer who designed most of the
dwarf planet
A dwarf planet is a small planetary-mass object that is in direct orbit around the Sun, massive enough to be hydrostatic equilibrium, gravitationally rounded, but insufficient to achieve clearing the neighbourhood, orbital dominance like the ...
symbols, proposed a Greek
tau
Tau (; uppercase Τ, lowercase τ or \boldsymbol\tau; ) is the nineteenth letter of the Greek alphabet, representing the voiceless alveolar plosive, voiceless dental or alveolar plosive . In the system of Greek numerals, it has a value of 300 ...
(the initial of Triton) combined with Neptune's trident as the symbol of Triton (). This symbol is not widely used.
Orbit and rotation
Triton is unique among all large moons in the Solar System for its
retrograde orbit around its planet (i.e. it orbits in a direction opposite to the planet's rotation). Most of the outer
irregular moons of
Jupiter
Jupiter is the fifth planet from the Sun and the List of Solar System objects by size, largest in the Solar System. It is a gas giant with a Jupiter mass, mass more than 2.5 times that of all the other planets in the Solar System combined a ...
and
Saturn
Saturn is the sixth planet from the Sun and the second largest in the Solar System, after Jupiter. It is a gas giant, with an average radius of about 9 times that of Earth. It has an eighth the average density of Earth, but is over 95 tim ...
also have retrograde orbits, as do some of the irregular moons of
Uranus
Uranus is the seventh planet from the Sun. It is a gaseous cyan-coloured ice giant. Most of the planet is made of water, ammonia, and methane in a Supercritical fluid, supercritical phase of matter, which astronomy calls "ice" or Volatile ( ...
and Neptune. However, these moons are all much more distant from their primaries and are small in comparison, with the largest of them (
Phoebe)
having only 8% of the diameter (and 0.03% of the mass) of Triton.
Triton's orbit is associated with two tilts, the
obliquity of Neptune's rotation to Neptune's orbit, 30°, and the inclination of Triton's orbit to Neptune's rotation, 157° (an inclination over 90° indicates retrograde motion). Triton's orbit precesses forward relative to Neptune's rotation with a period of about 678 Earth years (4.1 Neptunian years),
making its Neptune-orbit-relative inclination vary between 127° and 173°. That inclination is currently 130°; Triton's orbit is now near its maximum departure from coplanarity with Neptune's.
Triton's rotation is
tidally locked to be synchronous with its orbit around Neptune: it keeps one face oriented toward the planet at all times. Its equator is almost exactly aligned with its orbital plane.
At present, Triton's rotational axis is about 40° from Neptune's
orbital plane, hence as Neptune orbits the Sun, Triton's polar regions take turns facing the Sun, resulting in seasonal changes as one pole, then the other moves into the sunlight. Such changes were observed in 2010.
Triton's revolution around Neptune has become a nearly perfect circle with an
eccentricity
Eccentricity or eccentric may refer to:
* Eccentricity (behavior), odd behavior on the part of a person, as opposed to being "normal"
Mathematics, science and technology Mathematics
* Off-Centre (geometry), center, in geometry
* Eccentricity (g ...
of almost zero.
Viscoelastic
In materials science and continuum mechanics, viscoelasticity is the property of materials that exhibit both Viscosity, viscous and Elasticity (physics), elastic characteristics when undergoing deformation (engineering), deformation. Viscous mate ...
damping from tides alone is not thought to be capable of
circularizing Triton's orbit in the time since the origin of the system, and
gas drag from a
prograde debris disc is likely to have played a substantial role.
Tidal interactions also cause Triton's orbit, which is already closer to Neptune than the
Moon
The Moon is Earth's only natural satellite. It Orbit of the Moon, orbits around Earth at Lunar distance, an average distance of (; about 30 times Earth diameter, Earth's diameter). The Moon rotation, rotates, with a rotation period (lunar ...
is to Earth, to gradually decay further; predictions are that 3.6 billion years from now, Triton will pass within Neptune's
Roche limit
In celestial mechanics, the Roche limit, also called Roche radius, is the distance from a celestial body within which a second celestial body, held together only by its own force of gravity, will disintegrate because the first body's tidal force ...
.
This will result in either a collision with Neptune's atmosphere or the breakup of Triton, forming a new
ring system similar to that found around
Saturn
Saturn is the sixth planet from the Sun and the second largest in the Solar System, after Jupiter. It is a gas giant, with an average radius of about 9 times that of Earth. It has an eighth the average density of Earth, but is over 95 tim ...
.
Capture

The current understanding of moons in retrograde orbits means they cannot form in the same region of the
solar nebula as the planets they orbit. Therefore, Triton must have been captured from elsewhere in the Solar System. Astrophysicists believe it might have originated in the
Kuiper belt,
a ring of small icy objects extending from just inside the orbit of Neptune to about 50
AU from the Sun. Thought to be the point of origin for the majority of short-period
comet
A comet is an icy, small Solar System body that warms and begins to release gases when passing close to the Sun, a process called outgassing. This produces an extended, gravitationally unbound atmosphere or Coma (cometary), coma surrounding ...
s observed from Earth, the belt is also home to several large, planet-like bodies including
Pluto
Pluto (minor-planet designation: 134340 Pluto) is a dwarf planet in the Kuiper belt, a ring of Trans-Neptunian object, bodies beyond the orbit of Neptune. It is the ninth-largest and tenth-most-massive known object to directly orbit the Su ...
, which is now recognized as the largest in a population of Kuiper belt objects (the
plutinos)
locked in resonant orbits with Neptune. Triton is only slightly larger than Pluto and is nearly identical in composition, which has led to the hypothesis that the two share a common origin.
This has been further supported in a 2024 study of the chemical composition of Pluto and Triton which suggests they originated in the same region of the outer Solar System before the latter was pulled into Neptune's orbit.
Studying prior data on the two bodies, the team found that both have a large amount of nitrogen and trace amounts of methane and carbon monoxide, which could have accumulated in the outer regions of the young nebula "For some reason, Triton was then ejected from this region and ensnared by Neptune". "They had to have formed beyond the water-ice line," says Mandt, referring to the distance from the sun where water would freeze into ice or snow, which is why Triton and Pluto have similar amounts of certain key elements. "One possibility is that the giant planets moved closer to the sun early in the first 100 million years or so of the Solar System, which may have disrupted the orbits of some bodies like Triton", says Mandt.
The proposed capture of Triton may explain several features of the Neptunian system, including the extremely
eccentric orbit
In astrodynamics, the orbital eccentricity of an astronomical object is a dimensionless quantity, dimensionless parameter that determines the amount by which its orbit around another body deviates from a perfect circle. A value of 0 is a circu ...
of Neptune's moon
Nereid and the scarcity of moons as compared to the other
giant planets. Triton's initially eccentric orbit would have intersected the orbits of irregular moons and
disrupted those of smaller regular moons, dispersing them through
gravitation
In physics, gravity (), also known as gravitation or a gravitational interaction, is a fundamental interaction, a mutual attraction between all massive particles. On Earth, gravity takes a slightly different meaning: the observed force b ...
al interactions.
Triton's eccentric post-capture orbit would have also resulted in
tidal heating of its interior, which could have kept Triton fluid for a billion years; this inference is supported by evidence of differentiation in Triton's interior. This source of internal heat disappeared following tidal locking and circularization of the orbit.
Two types of mechanisms have been proposed for Triton's capture. To be gravitationally captured by a planet, a passing body must lose sufficient energy to be slowed down to a speed less than that required to escape.
An early model of how Triton may have been slowed was by collision with another object, either one that happened to be passing by Neptune (which is unlikely), or a moon or proto-moon in orbit around Neptune (which is more likely).
A more recent hypothesis suggests that, before its capture, Triton was part of a binary system. When this binary encountered Neptune, it interacted in such a way that the binary dissociated, with one portion of the binary expelled, and the other, Triton, becoming bound to Neptune. This event is more likely for more massive companions.
This hypothesis is supported by several lines of evidence, including binaries being very common among the large Kuiper belt objects.
The event was brief but gentle, saving Triton from collisional disruption. Events like this may have been common during the formation of Neptune, or later when it
migrated outward.
However, simulations in 2017 showed that after Triton's capture, and before its orbital eccentricity decreased, it probably did collide with at least one other moon, and caused collisions between other moons.
Physical characteristics
Triton is the seventh-largest moon and
sixteenth-largest object in the Solar System and is modestly larger than the
dwarf planet
A dwarf planet is a small planetary-mass object that is in direct orbit around the Sun, massive enough to be hydrostatic equilibrium, gravitationally rounded, but insufficient to achieve clearing the neighbourhood, orbital dominance like the ...
s
Pluto
Pluto (minor-planet designation: 134340 Pluto) is a dwarf planet in the Kuiper belt, a ring of Trans-Neptunian object, bodies beyond the orbit of Neptune. It is the ninth-largest and tenth-most-massive known object to directly orbit the Su ...
and
Eris. It is also the largest retrograde moon in the Solar System. It accounts for more than 99.5% of all the mass known to orbit Neptune, including the planet's rings and fifteen other known moons,
and is also more massive than all known moons in the Solar System smaller than itself combined.
Also, with a diameter 5.5% that of Neptune, it is the largest moon of a gas giant relative to its planet in terms of diameter, although Titan is bigger relative to Saturn in terms of mass (the ratio of Triton's mass to that of Neptune is approximately 1:4788). It has a radius, density (2.061 g/cm
3), temperature, and chemical composition similar to that of
Pluto
Pluto (minor-planet designation: 134340 Pluto) is a dwarf planet in the Kuiper belt, a ring of Trans-Neptunian object, bodies beyond the orbit of Neptune. It is the ninth-largest and tenth-most-massive known object to directly orbit the Su ...
.
Triton's surface is covered with a transparent layer of
annealed frozen nitrogen. Only 40% of Triton's surface has been observed and studied, but it may be entirely covered in such a thin sheet of nitrogen ice. Triton's surface consists of 55% nitrogen ice with other ices mixed in.
Water
Water is an inorganic compound with the chemical formula . It is a transparent, tasteless, odorless, and Color of water, nearly colorless chemical substance. It is the main constituent of Earth's hydrosphere and the fluids of all known liv ...
ice comprises 15–35% and frozen
carbon dioxide
Carbon dioxide is a chemical compound with the chemical formula . It is made up of molecules that each have one carbon atom covalent bond, covalently double bonded to two oxygen atoms. It is found in a gas state at room temperature and at norma ...
(
dry ice
Dry ice is the solid form of carbon dioxide. It is commonly used for temporary refrigeration as CO2 does not have a liquid state at normal atmospheric pressure and Sublimation (phase transition), sublimes directly from the solid state to the gas ...
) the remaining 10–20%. Trace ices include 0.1%
methane
Methane ( , ) is a chemical compound with the chemical formula (one carbon atom bonded to four hydrogen atoms). It is a group-14 hydride, the simplest alkane, and the main constituent of natural gas. The abundance of methane on Earth makes ...
and 0.05%
carbon monoxide
Carbon monoxide (chemical formula CO) is a poisonous, flammable gas that is colorless, odorless, tasteless, and slightly less dense than air. Carbon monoxide consists of one carbon atom and one oxygen atom connected by a triple bond. It is the si ...
.
There could also be
ammonia
Ammonia is an inorganic chemical compound of nitrogen and hydrogen with the chemical formula, formula . A Binary compounds of hydrogen, stable binary hydride and the simplest pnictogen hydride, ammonia is a colourless gas with a distinctive pu ...
ice on the surface, as there are indications of ammonia
dihydrate in the
lithosphere
A lithosphere () is the rigid, outermost rocky shell of a terrestrial planet or natural satellite. On Earth, it is composed of the crust and the lithospheric mantle, the topmost portion of the upper mantle that behaves elastically on time ...
.
Triton's mean density implies that it probably consists of about 30–45%
water ice (including relatively small amounts of volatile ices), with the remainder being rocky material.
Triton's surface area is 23 million km
2, which is 4.5% of
Earth
Earth is the third planet from the Sun and the only astronomical object known to Planetary habitability, harbor life. This is enabled by Earth being an ocean world, the only one in the Solar System sustaining liquid surface water. Almost all ...
, 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 observations. By comparison, the Moon reflects only 11%.
This high albedo causes Triton to reflect a lot of whatever little sunlight there is instead of absorbing it, causing it to have the coldest recorded temperature in the Solar System at . Triton's reddish color is thought to be the result of methane ice, which is converted to
tholins under exposure to
ultraviolet
Ultraviolet radiation, also known as simply UV, is electromagnetic radiation of wavelengths of 10–400 nanometers, shorter than that of visible light, but longer than X-rays. UV radiation is present in sunlight and constitutes about 10% of ...
radiation.
Because Triton's surface indicates a long history of melting, models of its interior posit that Triton is differentiated, like
Earth
Earth is the third planet from the Sun and the only astronomical object known to Planetary habitability, harbor life. This is enabled by Earth being an ocean world, the only one in the Solar System sustaining liquid surface water. Almost all ...
, into a solid
core, a
mantle and a
crust.
Water
Water is an inorganic compound with the chemical formula . It is a transparent, tasteless, odorless, and Color of water, nearly colorless chemical substance. It is the main constituent of Earth's hydrosphere and the fluids of all known liv ...
, the most abundant
volatile in the Solar System, comprises Triton's mantle, enveloping a core of rock and metal. There is enough rock in Triton's interior for
radioactive decay
Radioactive decay (also known as nuclear decay, radioactivity, radioactive disintegration, or nuclear disintegration) is the process by which an unstable atomic nucleus loses energy by radiation. A material containing unstable nuclei is conside ...
to maintain a liquid
subsurface ocean to this day, similar to what is thought to exist beneath the surface of
Europa and several other icy outer Solar System worlds.
This is not thought to be adequate to power convection in Triton's icy crust. However, the strong
obliquity tides are believed to generate enough additional heat to accomplish this and produce the observed signs of recent surface geological activity.
The black material ejected is suspected to contain
organic compound
Some chemical authorities define an organic compound as a chemical compound that contains a carbon–hydrogen or carbon–carbon bond; others consider an organic compound to be any chemical compound that contains carbon. For example, carbon-co ...
s,
and if liquid water is present on Triton, it has been speculated that this could make it
habitable for some form of life.
Atmosphere
Triton has a tenuous but well-structured and global
nitrogen
Nitrogen is a chemical element; it has Symbol (chemistry), symbol N and atomic number 7. Nitrogen is a Nonmetal (chemistry), nonmetal and the lightest member of pnictogen, group 15 of the periodic table, often called the Pnictogen, pnictogens. ...
atmosphere,
with trace amounts of carbon monoxide and small amounts of methane near its surface.
Like
Pluto
Pluto (minor-planet designation: 134340 Pluto) is a dwarf planet in the Kuiper belt, a ring of Trans-Neptunian object, bodies beyond the orbit of Neptune. It is the ninth-largest and tenth-most-massive known object to directly orbit the Su ...
's atmosphere, the atmosphere of Triton is thought to result from the evaporation of nitrogen from its surface.
Its surface temperature is at least because Triton's nitrogen ice is in the warmer, hexagonal crystalline state, and the phase transition between hexagonal and cubic nitrogen ice occurs at that temperature.
An upper limit in the low 40s (K) can be set from vapor pressure equilibrium with nitrogen gas in Triton's atmosphere.
This is colder than Pluto's average equilibrium temperature of . Triton's surface atmospheric pressure is only about .

Turbulence at Triton's surface creates a
troposphere
The troposphere is the lowest layer of the atmosphere of Earth. It contains 80% of the total mass of the Atmosphere, planetary atmosphere and 99% of the total mass of water vapor and aerosols, and is where most weather phenomena occur. From the ...
(a "weather region") rising to an altitude of 8 km. Streaks on Triton's surface left by geyser plumes suggest that the troposphere is driven by seasonal winds capable of moving material over a micrometer in size.
Unlike other atmospheres, Triton's lacks a
stratosphere and instead has a
thermosphere from altitudes of 8 to 950 km and an exosphere above that.
The temperature of Triton's upper atmosphere, at , is higher than that at its surface, due to heat absorbed from solar radiation and Neptune's
magnetosphere
In astronomy and planetary science, a magnetosphere is a region of space surrounding an astronomical object in which charged particles are affected by that object's magnetic field. It is created by a celestial body with an active interior Dynamo ...
.
A haze permeates most of Triton's troposphere, thought to be composed largely of
hydrocarbon
In organic chemistry, a hydrocarbon is an organic compound consisting entirely of hydrogen and carbon. Hydrocarbons are examples of group 14 hydrides. Hydrocarbons are generally colourless and Hydrophobe, hydrophobic; their odor is usually fain ...
s and
nitriles created by the action of sunlight on methane. Triton's atmosphere also has clouds of condensed nitrogen that lie between 1 and 3 km from its surface.
In 1997, observations from
Earth
Earth is the third planet from the Sun and the only astronomical object known to Planetary habitability, harbor life. This is enabled by Earth being an ocean world, the only one in the Solar System sustaining liquid surface water. Almost all ...
were made of Triton's limb as it
passed in front of stars. These observations indicated a denser atmosphere than was deduced from ''
Voyager 2'' data.
Other observations have shown an increase in temperature by 5% from 1989 to 1998.
These observations indicated Triton was approaching an unusually warm southern hemisphere summer season that happens only once every few hundred years. Hypotheses for this warming include a change of frost patterns on Triton's surface and a change in ice
albedo, which would allow more heat to be absorbed.
Another hypothesis argues that temperature changes are a result of the deposition of dark, red material from geological processes. Because Triton's
Bond albedo
The Bond albedo (also called spheric albedo, planetary albedo, and bolometric albedo), named after the American astronomer George Phillips Bond (1825–1865), who originally proposed it, is the fraction of power in the total electromagnetic radi ...
is among the highest in the
Solar System
The Solar SystemCapitalization of the name varies. The International Astronomical Union, the authoritative body regarding astronomical nomenclature, specifies capitalizing the names of all individual astronomical objects but uses mixed "Sola ...
, it is sensitive to small variations in spectral albedo.
Based on the increase in atmospheric pressure between 1989 and 1997, it is estimated that by 2010 Triton's atmospheric pressure may have increased to as much as 4 Pa.
By 2017, however, Triton's atmospheric surface pressure had nearly returned to ''Voyager 2'' levels; the cause for the rapid spike in atmospheric pressure between 1989 and 2017 remains unexplained.
Surface features

All detailed knowledge of the surface of Triton was acquired from a distance of 40,000 km by the ''Voyager 2'' spacecraft during a single encounter in 1989.
The 40% of Triton's surface imaged by ''Voyager 2'' revealed blocky outcrops, ridges, troughs, furrows, hollows, plateaus, icy plains, and a few craters. Triton is relatively flat; its observed topography never varies beyond a kilometer.
The
impact crater
An impact crater is a depression (geology), depression in the surface of a solid astronomical body formed by the hypervelocity impact event, impact of a smaller object. In contrast to volcanic craters, which result from explosion or internal c ...
s observed are concentrated almost entirely in Triton's
leading hemisphere.
Analysis of crater density and distribution has suggested that in geological terms, Triton's surface is extremely young, with regions varying from an estimated 50 million years old to just an estimated 6 million years old.
Fifty-five percent of Triton's surface is covered with frozen nitrogen, with water ice comprising 15–35% and
frozen CO2 forming the remaining 10–20%. The surface also has deposits of
tholins, a dark, tarry slurry of various organic chemical compounds.
Cryovolcanism
One of the largest
cryovolcanic features found on Triton is
Leviathan Patera, a caldera-like feature roughly 100 km in diameter seen near the equator. Surrounding this caldera is a massive cryovolcanic plain, Cipango Planum, which is at least 490,000 km
2 in area; assuming Leviathan Patera is the primary vent, Leviathan Patera is one of the largest volcanic or cryovolcanic constructs in the Solar System.
This feature is also connected to two enormous cryolava lakes seen northwest of the caldera. Because the cryolava on Triton is believed to be primarily water ice with some ammonia, these lakes would qualify as stable bodies of surface liquid water while they were molten. This is the first place such bodies have been found apart from Earth, and Triton is the only icy body known to feature cryolava lakes, although similar cryomagmatic extrusions can be seen on
Ariel,
Ganymede,
Charon, and
Titan.
Plumes
The ''
Voyager 2'' probe in 1989 observed a handful of
geyser-like eruptions of nitrogen gas or water and
entrained dust from beneath the surface of Triton in plumes up to 8 km high.
Triton is thus one of the few bodies in the Solar System on which active eruptions of some sort have been observed.
The best-observed examples are the
Hili plume and
Mahilani plume (named after a
Zulu water sprite and a
Tonga
Tonga, officially the Kingdom of Tonga, is an island country in Polynesia, part of Oceania. The country has 171 islands, of which 45 are inhabited. Its total surface area is about , scattered over in the southern Pacific Ocean. accordin ...
n sea spirit, respectively).
The precise mechanism behind Triton's plumes is debated;
one hypothesis is that Triton's plumes are driven by solar heating underneath a transparent or
translucent layer of nitrogen ice, creating a sort of "solid
greenhouse effect
The greenhouse effect occurs when greenhouse gases in a planet's atmosphere insulate the planet from losing heat to space, raising its surface temperature. Surface heating can happen from an internal heat source (as in the case of Jupiter) or ...
". As solar radiation warms the darker material beneath, this causes a rapid increase in pressure as the nitrogen begins to
sublimate until enough pressure accumulates for it to erupt through the translucent layer. This model is largely supported by the observation that Triton was near peak southern summer at the time of ''Voyager 2''s flyby, ensuring its southern polar cap was receiving prolonged sunlight.
CO2 geysers on Mars are thought to erupt from its
south polar cap each spring in the same way.
The significant geological activity on Triton has led to alternative proposals that the plumes may be cryovolcanic in nature, rather than driven by solar radiation. A cryovolcanic origin better explains the estimated output of Triton's plumes, which possibly exceeds . This is similar to that which is estimated for Enceladus's cryovolcanic plumes at . If Triton's plumes are cryovolcanically driven, it remains to be explained why they predominantly appear over its southern polar cap.
Triton's high surface heat flux may directly melt or vaporize nitrogen ice at the base of its polar caps, creating 'hot spots' which break through the ice or move to the ice caps' margins, before erupting explosively.
Though only observed up close once by the ''Voyager 2'' spacecraft, it is estimated that a plume eruption on Triton may last up to a year.
File:Leviathan Patera Volcanic Dome.gif, Close up of the volcanic province of Leviathan Patera, the caldera in the center of the image. Kraken Catena and Set Catena extend radially from the caldera to the right and upper-right of the image, while Ruach Planitia is seen to the upper left. Just off-screen to the lower left is a fault zone aligned radially with the caldera, indicating a close connection between the tectonics and volcanology of this geologic unit.
File:Voyager 2 Triton 14bg r90ccw colorized.jpg, Dark streaks across Triton's south polar cap surface, thought to be dust deposits left by eruptions of nitrogen
Nitrogen is a chemical element; it has Symbol (chemistry), symbol N and atomic number 7. Nitrogen is a Nonmetal (chemistry), nonmetal and the lightest member of pnictogen, group 15 of the periodic table, often called the Pnictogen, pnictogens. ...
geysers.
File:Cryolava-lake-triton.jpg, Two large cryolava lakes on Triton, seen west of Leviathan Patera. Combined, they are nearly the size of Kraken Mare on Titan. These features are unusually crater free, indicating they are young and were recently molten.
Polar cap, plains and ridges
Triton's south polar region is covered by a highly reflective cap of frozen nitrogen and methane sprinkled by impact craters and openings of geysers. Little is known about the north pole because it was on the night side during the ''Voyager 2'' encounter, but it is thought that Triton must also have a north polar ice cap.
The high plains found on Triton's eastern hemisphere, such as Cipango Planum, cover over and blot out older features, and are therefore almost certainly the result of icy lava washing over the previous landscape. The plains are dotted with pits, such as
Leviathan Patera, which are probably the vents from which this lava emerged. The composition of the lava is unknown, although a mixture of ammonia and water is suspected.
Four roughly circular "walled plains" have been identified on Triton. They are the flattest regions so far discovered, with a variance in altitude of less than 200 m. They are thought to have formed from the eruption of icy lava.
The plains near Triton's eastern limb are dotted with black spots, the ''
maculae''. Some maculae are simple dark spots with diffuse boundaries, and others comprise a dark central patch surrounded by a white halo with sharp boundaries. The maculae typically have diameters of about 100 km and widths of the halos of between 20 and 30 km.
There are extensive ridges and valleys in complex patterns across Triton's surface, probably the result of freeze–thaw cycles.
Many also appear to be tectonic and may result from an extension or
strike-slip faulting.
There are long double ridges of ice with central troughs bearing a strong resemblance to
Europan lineae (although they have a larger scale
), and which may have a similar origin,
possibly shear heating from strike-slip motion along faults caused by diurnal tidal stresses experienced before Triton's orbit was fully circularized.
These faults with parallel ridges expelled from the interior cross complex terrain with valleys in the equatorial region. The ridges and furrows, or ''
sulci,'' such as
Yasu Sulci,
Ho Sulci, and
Lo Sulci,
are thought to be of intermediate age in Triton's geological history, and in many cases to have formed concurrently. They tend to be clustered in groups or "packets".
Cantaloupe terrain

Triton's western hemisphere consists of a strange series of fissures and depressions known as "cantaloupe terrain" because it resembles the skin of a
cantaloupe melon. Although it has few craters, it is thought that this is the oldest terrain on Triton.
It probably covers much of Triton's western half.
Cantaloupe terrain, which is mostly dirty water ice, is only known to exist on Triton. It contains depressions in diameter.
The depressions (''cavi'') are probably not impact craters because they are all of the similar size and have smooth curves. The leading hypothesis for their formation is
diapirism, the rising of "lumps" of less dense material through a stratum of denser material.
Alternative hypotheses include formation by collapses, or by flooding caused by
cryovolcanism.
Impact craters

Due to constant erasure and modification by ongoing geological activity,
impact crater
An impact crater is a depression (geology), depression in the surface of a solid astronomical body formed by the hypervelocity impact event, impact of a smaller object. In contrast to volcanic craters, which result from explosion or internal c ...
s on Triton's surface are relatively rare. A census of Triton's craters imaged by ''Voyager 2'' found only 179 that were incontestably of impact origin, compared with 835 observed for
Uranus
Uranus is the seventh planet from the Sun. It is a gaseous cyan-coloured ice giant. Most of the planet is made of water, ammonia, and methane in a Supercritical fluid, supercritical phase of matter, which astronomy calls "ice" or Volatile ( ...
's moon
Miranda, which has only three percent of Triton's
surface area
The surface area (symbol ''A'') of a solid object is a measure of the total area that the surface of the object occupies. The mathematical definition of surface area in the presence of curved surfaces is considerably more involved than the d ...
.
The largest crater observed on Triton thought to have been created by an impact is a feature called
Mazomba.
Although larger craters have been observed, they are generally thought to be volcanic.
The few impact craters on Triton are almost all concentrated in the leading hemisphere—that facing the direction of the orbital motion—with the majority concentrated around the equator between 30° and 70° longitude,
resulting from material swept up from orbit around Neptune.
Because it orbits with one side permanently facing the planet, astronomers expect that Triton should have fewer impacts on its trailing hemisphere, due to impacts on the leading hemisphere being more frequent and more violent.
''Voyager 2'' imaged only 40% of Triton's surface, so this remains uncertain. However, the observed cratering asymmetry exceeds what can be explained based on the impactor populations, and implies a younger surface age for the crater-free regions (≤ 6 million years old) than for the cratered regions (≤ 50 million years old).
Observation and exploration

The orbital properties of Triton were already determined with high accuracy in the 19th century. It was found to have a retrograde orbit, at a very high angle of inclination to the plane of Neptune's orbit. The first detailed observations of Triton were not made until 1930. Little was known about the satellite until ''
Voyager 2'' flew by in 1989.
Before the
flyby of ''Voyager 2'', astronomers suspected that Triton might have
liquid nitrogen
Liquid nitrogen (LN2) is nitrogen in a liquid state at cryogenics, low temperature. Liquid nitrogen has a boiling point of about . It is produced industrially by fractional distillation of liquid air. It is a colorless, mobile liquid whose vis ...
seas and a nitrogen/methane atmosphere with a density as much as 30% that of Earth. Like the famous overestimates of the
atmospheric density of Mars, this proved incorrect. As with Mars, a denser atmosphere is postulated for its early history.
The first attempt to measure the diameter of Triton was made by
Gerard Kuiper in 1954. He obtained a value of 3,800 km. Subsequent measurement attempts arrived at values ranging from 2,500 to 6,000 km, or from slightly smaller than the Moon (3,474.2 km) to nearly half the diameter of Earth.
Data from the approach of ''Voyager 2'' to Neptune on August 25, 1989, led to a more accurate estimate of Triton's diameter (2,706 km).
In the 1990s, various observations from Earth were made of the limb of Triton using the
occultation of nearby stars, which indicated the presence of an atmosphere and an exotic surface. Observations in late 1997 suggest that Triton is heating up and the atmosphere has become significantly denser since ''Voyager 2'' flew past in 1989.
New concepts for missions to the Neptune system to be conducted in the 2010s were proposed by
NASA
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA ) is an independent agencies of the United States government, independent agency of the federal government of the United States, US federal government responsible for the United States ...
scientists on numerous occasions over the last decades. All of them identified Triton as being a prime target and a separate Triton lander comparable to the
''Huygens'' probe for
Titan was frequently included in those plans. No efforts aimed at Neptune and Triton went beyond the proposal phase and NASA's funding for missions to the outer Solar System is currently focused on the Jupiter and Saturn systems.
A proposed lander mission to Triton, called ''
Triton Hopper'', would mine nitrogen ice from the surface of Triton and process it to be used as a propellant for a small rocket, enabling it to fly or 'hop' across the surface.
Another concept, involving a flyby, was formally proposed in 2019 as part of NASA's
Discovery Program under the name ''
Trident''.
Neptune Odyssey is a mission concept for a Neptune orbiter with a focus on Triton being studied beginning April 2021 as a possible
large strategic science mission by NASA that would launch in 2033 and arrive at the Neptune system in 2049.
Two lower-cost mission concepts were subsequently developed for the
New Frontiers program: the first the following June and the second in 2023. The first is ''Triton Ocean World Surveyor'', which would launch in 2031 and arrive in 2047,
and the second is ''Nautilus'', which would launch August 2042 and arrive in April 2057.
Maps
See also
*
List of natural satellites
*
Geology of Triton
*
Neptune in fiction § Triton
* ''
Triton Hopper'', a proposed lander to Triton
*
Triton's sky
*
Shensuo, a proposed mission that would flyby Triton
Notes
References
External links
Triton profileat NASA's Solar System Exploration site
*
at ''The Nine Planets''
(includin
at ''Views of the Solar System''
Triton mapfrom Paul Schenk, Lunar and Planetary Institute
Triton imagesfrom the NASA/JPL Photojournal
Triton nomenclaturefrom the USGS Planetary Nomenclature website
{{Portal bar, Astronomy, Stars, Spaceflight, Outer space, Solar System
Irregular satellites
Former dwarf planets
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M
Moons with a retrograde orbit