@prefix skos: <http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#> .
@prefix dc: <http://purl.org/dc/terms/> .
@prefix xsd: <http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#> .

<http://astrothesaurus.org/uat/2187>
  skos:broader <http://astrothesaurus.org/uat/1098> ;
  dc:modified "2020-12-03T17:31:59.661Z"^^xsd:dateTime, "2020-12-03T17:32:11.41Z"^^xsd:dateTime ;
  skos:prefLabel "Triton"@en ;
  skos:editorialNote [ ] ;
  dc:contributor <http://editor.vocabs.ands.org.au/user/AAS_Frey.Katie_Admin> ;
  dc:creator <http://editor.vocabs.ands.org.au/user/AAS_Frey.Katie_Admin> ;
  dc:created "2020-12-03T17:31:41.069Z"^^xsd:dateTime ;
  a skos:Concept ;
  skos:definition "The seventh and the largest of Neptune's satellites. It has a diameter of 2,700 km and orbits its planet at a mean distance of 354,760 km every 5.877 days. Triton was discovered by William Lassell in 1846 scarcely a month after Neptune was discovered. Triton is colder than any other measured object in the solar system with a surface temperature of -235° C. It has an extremely thin atmosphere. Nitrogen ice particles might form thin clouds a few kilometers above the surface. The atmospheric pressure at Triton's surface is about 15 microbars, 0.000015 times the sea-level surface pressure on Earth. Triton is the only large satellite in the solar system to circle a planet in a retrograde motion, that is in a direction opposite to the rotation of the planet."@en .

<http://astrothesaurus.org/uat/1098>
  skos:prefLabel "Neptunian satellites"@en ;
  a skos:Concept ;
  skos:narrower <http://astrothesaurus.org/uat/2187> .

