Jupiter Now Has 69 Moons

Authored by blogs.scientificamerican.com and submitted by ENTdrHayes

The planet Jupiter is a beast: Three-hundred-and-seventeen times the mass of the Earth, mostly made of metallic hydrogen, and at the center of an astonishing collective of orbiting natural bodies.

In fact, Jupiter's satellites form a shrunken version of a full planetary system: from the tightly bound larger Galilean moons (orbiting in their Laplacian mean-motion resonances, akin to places like TRAPPIST-1) to the remarkable array of smaller moonlets that encircle this world out to more than 30 million kilometers.

These bodies circle Jupiter in anywhere from about 7 hours to an astonishing 1,000 days.

NASA's Juno spacecraft captured this set of time lapse images of the large Galilean moons during the spacecraft's approach in early 2016:

Until recently the cataloged satellites totaled 67 in number. But only the innermost 15 of these orbit Jupiter in a prograde sense (in the direction of the planet's spin). The rest are retrograde, and are likely captured objects - other pieces of the solar system's solid inventory that strayed into Jupiter's gravitational grasp.

That population of outer moons is mostly small stuff, only a few are 20-60 kilometers in diameter, most are barely 1-2 kilometers in size, and increasingly difficult to spot.

Now astronomers Scott Sheppard, David Tholen, and Chadwick Trujillo have added two more; bringing Jupiter's moon count to 69.

These additions are also about 1-2 km in size, and were spotted in images that were part of a survey for much more distant objects out in the Kuiper Belt. Jupiter just happened to be conveniently close in the sky at the time. The moons are S/2016 J1 and S/2017 J1, and are about 21 million km and 24 million km from Jupiter.

By themselves these small satellites don't amount to much. But they are a vivid reminder of the sheer abundance of material out there in our solar system, and of Jupiter's royal gravitational status.

lordnikkon on June 13rd, 2017 at 08:02 UTC »

Does anyone else find it crazy that it is 2017 and we are still finding new moons around planets in our own solar system? It seriously makes you wonder how much more unknown is out there and how much more effort should be put into space exploration when we still have plenty of things to find near to earth

socialister on June 13rd, 2017 at 07:32 UTC »

The outer moon orbits at 24 million km. Mercury orbits at 58 million km. Amazing that something can orbit Jupiter within an order of magnitude of something that can orbit the sun.

confusedtopher on June 13rd, 2017 at 04:30 UTC »

Ok no more moons. That's the perfect amount of moons.