Jupiter LVI

[2][3] Images of the newly discovered moon were captured using the Magellan-Baade telescope at the Las Campanas Observatory in Chile.

The discovery of Jupiter LVI brought the Jovian satellite count to 67.

It is one of the outer retrograde swarm of objects orbiting Jupiter and belongs to the Pasiphae group.

[9] 2 New Satellites of Jupiter Discovered, Carnegie Institution Department of Terriestrial Magnetism, 23 February 2012

This article related to a natural satellite is a stub.