No , however there is a Moon named after Pan. It is Saturn's innermost moon.
In the book "Northern Lights" by Philip Pullman, Lyra's daemon is named Pantalaimon, also known as Pan. Pan frequently shape-shifts into different animal forms and serves as a physical representation of Lyra's emotions and conscience.
It looks like an old fashioned plough with a bent handle. Some people say it looks like a pan with a bent handle. To the naked eye, there are seven stars; four of them form the trapezium-shaped plough blade, and one star in the corner joins three others to form the bent handle, which curves smoothly in a clockwise direction, ending with Polaris, the pole star, which is the brightest star in the constellation.
There is no direct familial relationship between Apollo and Pan in Greek mythology. Apollo is the god of the sun, music, and healing, while Pan is the god of nature and shepherds. They both are part of the Greek pantheon, but they do not share a parent or sibling relationship.
Before Earth formed as a planet, it was a spinning disk of gas and dust called a protoplanetary disk. Over time, the particles in this disk began to collide and stick together, eventually forming larger bodies that eventually merged to become the Earth we know today.
Pan is the Greek god of shepherds, pastures, and nature. he is often associated with fertility, music, and the wilderness. Pan is depicted as half-man, half-goat with horns and is known for his mischievous and lustful nature.
Eupheme, Aex, Symaethis, Ismenis, and Ekho were all named as lovers of Pan/Faunus.
The god Pan was called, in Rome, Faunus. Also Sylvanus
Faunus
I believe it is Pan.
Faunus
His Roman equivalent was Faunus.
Pan (Faunus in Roman)
Faunus is the Roman form of the Greek god Pan, just as Jupiter is the Roman form of Zeus, or Juno the Roman equivalent of Hera, goddess of family, the wife of Zeus/Jupiter.
HermesAnswer 2:I would rather say Pan.
Pan. He was also the god of nature in general. Pan was the Greek god. His Roman counterpart was Faunus.
You are referring to Faunus, whose Greek counterpart was Pan. He is the archetype from which we get Satyrs.
The earth god of wood and fields would be Pan in Greece or Faunus in Rome.