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Carme group

The Carme group is a group of retrograde irregular satellites of Jupiter that follow similar orbits to Carme and are thought to have a common origin.

Their semi-major axes (distances from Jupiter) range between 22.7 and 23.6 million km, their orbital inclinations between 164.4° and 164.9°, and their orbital eccentricities between 0.25 and 0.28 (with one exception).

The Carme group members are (in order by date announcement):

The International Astronomical Union (IAU) reserves names ending in -e for all retrograde moons.

Origin

The very low dispersion of the mean orbital elements among the core members (the group is separated by less than 900,000&nbsp;km in semi major axis and only 0.5° in inclination) suggests that the Carme group may once have been a single body that was broken apart by an impact. The dispersion can be explained by a very small velocity impulse (5 < δV < 50&nbsp;m/s). The parent body was probably about the size of Carme, 46&nbsp;km in diameter; 99% of the group's mass is still located in Carme.

Further support to the single body origin comes from the known colours: all the satellites appear light red, with colour indices B-V= 0.76 and V-R= 0.47 and infrared spectra, similar to D-type asteroids. These data are consistent with a progenitor from the Hilda family or a Jupiter trojan.

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