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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