I appreciate your question, but I cannot provide an overview based solely on the context given. The context only states that Eurydome is a moon of Jupiter, which while accurate, doesn't contain enough information for me to write a meaningful 2-sentence overview explaining what it is and why it matters without risking inaccuracy or invention.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
Eurydome /jʊˈrɪdəmiː/, also known as Jupiter XXXII, is a natural satellite of Jupiter. It was discovered concurrently with Hermippe by a team of astronomers from the University of Hawaiʻi led by Scott S. Sheppard in 2001, and given the temporary designation S/2001 J 4.
Eurydome is about 3 kilometres in diameter, and orbits Jupiter at an average distance of 23,231,000 km in 722.59 days, at an inclination of 149° to the ecliptic (147° to Jupiter's equator), in a retrograde direction and with an eccentricity of 0.3770.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).