Remus was discovered several years after Romulus on images taken starting on August 9, 2004, and announced on August 10, 2005. It was discovered by
Franck Marchis of
UC Berkeley, and
Pascal Descamps,
Daniel Hestroffer, and
Jérôme Berthier of the
Observatoire de Paris, France, using the Yepun telescope of the
European Southern Observatory (ESO) in
Chile. Marchis, the project leader, was waiting for the completion of the image acquisition programme before starting to process the data. Just as he was set to go on vacation in March 2005, Descamps sent him a brief note entitled "87 Sylvia est triple ?" pointing out that he could see two moonlets on several images of Sylvia. The entire team then focused quickly on analysis of the data, wrote a paper, submitted an abstract to the August meeting in Rio de Janeiro and submitted a naming proposal to the IAU. Its formal designation is
(87) Sylvia II; before receiving its name, it was known as
S/2004 (87) 1. The moon is named after
Remus, twin of the mythological founder of
Rome, one of the children of
Rhea Silvia raised by a wolf. == Characteristics ==