12 more of Jupiter's moons found

Discovery of satellites raises gas giant’s known total to 79

Nine of the 12 recently discovered moons orbit Jupiter (above) in the opposition direction than the planet rotates. It takes them about two Earth years to rotate that planet once.
Nine of the 12 recently discovered moons orbit Jupiter (above) in the opposition direction than the planet rotates. It takes them about two Earth years to rotate that planet once.

Astronomers have discovered 12 additional moons around Jupiter, bringing the grand total of the planet's known satellites up to a whopping 79.

The new moons are all relatively small -- between 0.6 and 1.8 miles across, which is likely why they haven't been spotted before, scientists said.

They were first seen in the spring of 2017 by researchers who have spent the last few years searching for Planet X, also known as Planet 9 -- an object they expect to be Mars-sized or bigger.

They believe it lies in the distant solar system, as much as 100 times farther from the sun than the Earth is. For reference, Pluto is about 30 times farther from the sun than Earth is.

Any object that far away will receive very little light from the sun that it can reflect back to telescopes on Earth, which is why the search has been so challenging, said Scott Sheppard, an astronomer at Washington's Carnegie Institution for Science who led the work.

To aid them on this quest, the science team is using a 4-meter telescope in Chile attached to the largest camera ever built.

Sheppard and his colleagues are primarily focused on surveying the deep outer solar system, but a few years ago they realized that the Jupiter system was well positioned for them to take a closer look at its myriad satellites.

"It was kind of like trying to kill two birds with one stone," Sheppard said. "We thought we might find a few more moons by covering the whole Jovian system in one exposure, which hadn't been done before."

They were able to determine which points of light in their images were Jovian moons because they moved across the sky at the same rate as their host planet.

"Anything that moved much slower would be a more distant object," Sheppard said.

Their observations revealed the 12 never-before-seen moons. Eleven of them have been verified by representatives of the International Astronomical Union's Minor Planet Center.

Nine of them circle Jupiter in a wide, retrograde orbit, which means they move in the opposite direction that the planet rotates. It takes them about two Earth years to orbit Jupiter.

Two of them are part of a more inner group of moons that circle the planet in the prograde, or the same direction as it spins. This group completes a single orbit around Jupiter in one Earth year.

However, there is one moon, tentatively called Valetudo, that stands out. It doesn't belong to any known group of moons, and it follows a strange prograde orbit that occasionally crosses the path of the retrograde moons.

"It's basically going the wrong direction on the highway," Sheppard said. "And that means that the chances of a collision are much higher."

Sheppard said the discovery of Valetudo could help answer some longstanding questions about the formation of the extensive Jovian system.

Scientists believe that the families of small moons we see orbiting Jupiter today may have once been single, larger moons that broke apart after colliding with something -- perhaps an asteroid or comet.

But if Valetudo is the remnant of a much larger moon with the same weird orbit, it is possible that the families of small moons were created by the collision of two moons.

Sheppard added that the team is currently running a simulation using supercomputers to determine how long before Valetudo crashes into one of the moons in the retrograde orbit. He expects that it will be sometime between 100 million and 1 billion years.

"The chances of us seeing an impact in any one year is vanishingly small, but it is likely in the life of the solar system," said Gareth Williams, an astronomer at the Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, who determined the orbits of the newly discovered moons for the International Astronomical Union.

Williams said he was not surprised by Sheppard's discovery of additional moons around Jupiter.

"We know there are probably hundreds of moons around Jupiter that are a kilometer or more in diameter at the moment," he said.

However, he said the finding is still significant.

"Knowing how many satellites around each of the planets is important because any formation scenario for the planet has to account for the satellite system," he said. "If your model only accounts for 20 satellites, that's not going to fly when you suddenly have 60."

A Section on 07/18/2018

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