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On July 6, 1938, an American astronomer named Seth Barnes Nicholson discovered Jupiter's moon Lysithea.

Nicholson spotted Lysithea from Mount Wilson Observatory in California, where he had previously discovered three more Jovian moons. This was the tenth moon astronomers had found at Jupiter. As of June 2017, sixty-nine moons have been found orbiting the giant gas planet. Lysithea only measures about 11 miles in diameter and is part of Jupiter's Himalia group, which contains five irregular moons that follow similar orbits and are thought to have a common origin. It was named after the mythological character Lysithea, daughter of the god Oceanus and one of the many lovers of the almighty Zeus.

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00:00On this day in space.
00:03In 1938, an American astronomer named Seth Barnes Nicholson discovered Jupiter's moon
00:08Lysithia. Nicholson spotted Lysithia from Mount Wilson Observatory
00:12in California, where he had previously discovered three more Jovian moons.
00:16This was the tenth moon astronomers had found at Jupiter.
00:19As of June 2017, 69 moons have been found orbiting the giant
00:24gas planet. Lysithia only measures about 11 miles in diameter
00:27and is part of Jupiter's Himalaya group, which contains five irregular moons that
00:31show similar orbits and are thought to have a common origin.
00:35It was named after the mythological character Lysithia, daughter of the god Oceanus
00:39and one of the many lovers of the almighty Zeus. And that's what happened
00:43on this day in space.
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