Ilmarë

Ilmarë
Hubble Space Telescope image of Varda and its satellite Ilmarë, taken in 2010 and 2011
Discovery
Discovered byKeith S. Noll et al.
Discovery date2009, based on images taken on 26 April 2009
Designations
Designation
Varda I
Pronunciation/ˈɪlmər/
Named after
Ilmarë
(figure by J. R. R. Tolkien)
174567 Varda I
AdjectivesIlmarëan /ɪlməˈrən/
Orbital characteristics
4809±39 km
Eccentricity0.0181±0.0045 or 0.0247±0.0048
(0.0215±0.0080 adopted)
5.75058±0.00015 d
Inclination101.0±1.9 or 85.1±1.8
Satellite ofVarda
Physical characteristics
≈356
326+38
−34
 km
Mass≈2.2×1019 kg
Mean density
1.24+0.50
−0.35
 g/cm3
(system)
Albedo≈0.085
0.166+0.043
−0.033
(assuming same as Varda)
Spectral type
B−V = 0.857±0.061
V−I = 1.266±0.052
3.097±0.060

    Ilmarë, formal designation 174567 Varda I, is the single known natural satellite of the Kuiper belt object 174567 Varda. It was discovered by Keith Noll et al. in 2009, at a separation of about 0.12 arcsec, using discovery images taken by the Hubble Space Telescope on 26 April 2009, and reported in 2011. At approximately 326 km in diameter (about 45% that of its primary), it is the fourth or fifth-largest known moon of a trans-Neptunian object, after Pluto I Charon, Eris I Dysnomia, Orcus I Vanth and very possibly Haumea I Hiʻiaka. Assuming that Ilmarë has the same albedo and density as Varda, Ilmarë would constitute approximately 8.4% of the system's mass, approximately 2.2×1019 kg.