Is This Moon Three? 317
tetrad writes "The BBC reports that a new object has been discovered orbiting Earth. It's possible that it's just a piece of space junk, but more likely it is a rock that has been recently (in the last year) captured by our planet's gravitational field. If the object is confirmed to be natural, this would be Earth's third moon. (Did you know there were two already?)" Here's our earlier mention of Earth's alleged second moon. Update: 09/12 04:52 GMT by T : Reader cscx adds a link to an article running on space.com which says this newfound object may be some trash from the Apollo missions.
size matters? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:http://www.geocities.com/microplanet333/ (Score:2)
After you posted the text I read it again. No mention of j002e2 (or j002e3). The object he found was designated 2002BJ2 [unipi.it]. With an aphelion of 3.4 and a period of 1071 days, it is definitely not orbiting the Earth.
x-files fodder (Score:1, Offtopic)
What's in a moon? (Score:4, Interesting)
The "trojan asteroid" described in the previous story is only 3 miles wide and take 770 years to orbit the earth. That is not what elementary schoolteachers say is a moon, a la Jupiter's many moons... giants like Europa and IO.
I also heard a while back that Charon might not be a real moon either, because of size or rotation or something? Huh?
I'm not versed in astronomy enough to know, so does anyone have an answer for laypeople, so I can talk with people at work about this?
Re:What's in a moon? (Score:5, Funny)
Not just France (Score:2)
Re:What's in a moon? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:What's in a moon? (Score:4, Informative)
Well, here's what Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary [m-w.com] says:
Moon:
-- 1a : a natural satellite of a planet
Satellite:
-- 2a : a celestial body orbiting another of larger size
I think based on these common definitions that these objects, assuming they are found be natural and that they can be proved to orbit Earth, should be called moons. Maybe they don't fit our cultural, unwritten definition of a Moon, but that doesn't change the facts. So, maybe we need to change what most people think of as the Moon...
Re:What's in a moon? (Score:2)
Well, according to your definition of a moon, 3753 Cruithne is not a satellite of the Earth, because it does not orbit the Earth. [queensu.ca]
Re:What's in a moon? (Score:2)
Re:What's in a moon? (Score:2)
Moon -- a natural satellite of a planet
Additionally there is a moon of Jupiter that has these properties:
S/1999 J 1 (a provisional name)
The seventeenth and outermost moon; S/1999 J 1 is the smallest-known moon orbiting a major planet. This moon is 3 miles (5 km) in diameter and has an irregular orbit roughly 15 million miles (24 million km) from Jupiter. It orbits Jupiter in 774 (Earth) days and is in a retrograde orbit (orbiting opposite to the direction of Jupiter). It was discovered by Robert S. McMillan et al (at the Spacewatch program at the University of Arizona ) in 2000.
Re:What's in a moon? (Score:5, Interesting)
Thus, the Pluto-Charon system is probably much more accurately labeled as either a pair of asteroids due to size considerations, or a dual-planetary system because their orbits are highly regular, albeit at a significant pitch compared to the other 8 planetary systems.
I've also heard that the Earth/Luna system should be considered a dual-planetary system because Luna has a much higher percentage of it's parent planet's mass than other moons... This jives with the 'Planetary Collision' theory of moon formataion, in which the moon is actualy a significant chunk of Earth, torn off early during our planet's formation.
The 'second moon', Cruithne, fits in with a large category of non-moon, non-planetary, non-asteroid bodies in the solar system. If you ever study the 'Trojans', you know that there are huge bodies of apparent moonlets that sit on a sixty-degree angle from Jupiter's, directly along Jupiter's orbit from the sun. (They are apparently held in such a strange place by the gravity of Jupiter vs. the gravity of Sol.) Rather than calling Cruithne a moon, we're probably better off adding a new 'common' cetegory to our solar classification to include it and the Trojans. AFAIC, there's no reason not to call these all Trojans and be done with it.
The 60-degree angle, moons, and whatnot (Score:5, Informative)
Anytime you have something (Foo) orbiting something else (Bar), i.e., once the requirements of "orbit" are met, there are five points of gravitational equilibrium set up amongst the two bodies. They're called LaGrange points. The last two, L4 and L5, are on Foo's orbit around Bar, sixty degrees ahead of Foo (L4) and sixty degrees behind (L5).
L4 and L5 by themselves, ignoring L1-L3, are often called Trojan points, named for this particular group of satellites.
As for the defintion of moon versus just another satellite in general, I believe it has to do with respective mass ratios, and where the fulcrum point of rotation is between the two bodies. Right now our own moon isn't in a true rotation around us, we're in a sort of dumbbell tumble, and the center of the dumbbell is a bit below the ground.
(Actual astronomers please correct me, I'm on a number of narcotic-containing painkillers right now and could have gotten some words tumbled.)
Re:The 60-degree angle, moons, and whatnot (Score:2)
That might make a good definition: if the center of gravity between the two bodies is below the surface of one of the bodies, then the other one is a "moon" as long as it is not artificially created (in which case call it a "man-made satellite"). Is this what you mean?
If the center of g is above the surface, then you have a "double planet". (Or double asteroid, assuming those definitions can be settled.)
As far as the ones with "funny" orbits (lagrange), I don't know about those. Call them something different, like "Lamoons" or something.
Another Criteria (Score:3, Interesting)
In the case of the Earth/Moon system, it is called a double planet because the path of the moon from the point of view of the sun in strictly concave -- that is it dosn't loop back on itself as do other moons.
THat is interesting-- L4 and L5 planetoids? (Score:2)
THis is actually really interesting because it indicates that these are on the L4 and L5 points relative to Jupiter and the Sun. For those that don't know the Lagrange points are the points where the gravity from the orbiting and orbited bodies are equal, and of the five points, only 2 are stable (L4 and L5). This is why, after the Moon, why the L4 and L5 points will be very important politically, economically, and militarily, assuming we want to have commercial relations with Mars...
But this new object is on a 50 day orbit around earth, so it is not on L4 or L5.
Re:THat is interesting-- L4 and L5 planetoids? (Score:2)
This means that the object will either crash into the planet, or get flung off into space, eventually, right? Or will it eventually settle in to a stable orbit?
Kintanon
Re:THat is interesting-- L4 and L5 planetoids? (Score:2)
Re:THat is interesting-- L4 and L5 planetoids? (Score:2)
I think you misunderstand me. L4 and L5 are important points because they are stable orbits which remain fixed in positions related to the other two bodies. Other orbits are stable, but for example, the relative position of Mercury relative to the Sun and Venus varies, but if you had a planetoid on L4 relative to Venus, its position would be fixed relative to the positions of the Sun and Venus.
Re:THat is interesting-- L4 and L5 planetoids? (Score:2)
Now, is the big rock close enough for us to go mess with it conveniently?
Kintanon
Re:What's in a moon? (Score:2)
Why does it matter? Should we call the Moon a moon, a co-planet... It's just a word!
I've seen a few times on here "When should planet/moon be considered double-planet?". This question illustrates the futility of talking so much about the first question. If you set some exact criteria, there will be a point in which we have a planet/moon system, and by adding a single atom's worth of mass to the moon, it would be a double planet system.
Obviously there are times that it is clearly Planet/Moon (Neptune/Triton for example), and if two bodies have mass within 10%, it is clearly a double planet. I just don't think that the argument of whether Pluto/Charon and Earth/Moon are double planets or planet/moon systems, just because it is a gradual change.
When are two galaxies said to be colliding, and when does it stop? At what instant is a person dead? Within
You see?
Re:What's in a moon? (Score:2)
IANAA, but a professor once told me that a body that orbits another non-stellar body is a moon
So that would make the sun a moon. As well as all the stars in the sky.
Re:What's in a moon? (Score:5, Interesting)
Isaac Asimov, in one of his popular-science articles, once presented a well-reasoned argument that the Earth and Moon should not be considered a planet and satellite, but a double planet. He formed his argument by comparing the masses of all the other moons in the Solar system to the masses of their primaries, and showed that the Moon:Earth mass ratio was far greater than that of any other planet/satellite pair. He suggested that we could account for this "outlier" by considering the Earth and Moon to be a double planet.
Whether this argument would stand up to real scientific scrutiny, I don't know. It sounded pretty good to me, but I was just 10 at the time. Maybe it was just gee-whiz stuff made up to impress 10-year-olds, but that doesn't really seem like Isaac's style.
Does anybody else remember this essay?
--Jim
Re:What's in a moon? (Score:5, Informative)
If the center of gravity of two bodies lies inside one of the bodies then that is the planet and the other is the moon. If the center of gravity is between the two objects then it is a two planet system.
Re:What's in a moon? (Score:2)
by the way, regardless of the crap all others dig up... I agree with this definition.
Re:What's in a moon? (Score:2)
Re:What's in a moon? (Score:2)
Not a "moon" like Jupiter has but "The Moon."
You know the one.
The one that has drastically affected this planet since before people -- the one the wolves call "Whoooooooooo!"
Re:What's in a moon? (Score:2)
I'm pretty sure you're correct (Score:2, Informative)
"the sun" actually = "sol" (latin in origin, i believe)
"the moon" actually = "luna" (latin in origin, i believe).
It makes sense to me, but then again, I dunno what validity that holds.
And in the movie Moonstruck (Score:2)
Re:What's in a moon? (Score:2)
Charon is a satellite of Pluto. Perhaps you're thinking of recent evidence that both Pluto and Charon were not formed by the proceses that formed the other planets, but are, instead, Kuiper Belt [arizona.edu] objects. The Kuiper Belt is a region of the Solar System beyond the orbit of Pluto that is believed to be the source many comets and other objects.
Re:What's in a moon? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:What's in a moon? (Score:2)
And the moon recedes from the Earth five inches a year. So, if the moon has receded far enough that the center of gravity no longer lies beneath the Earth's surface does the moon graduate from being a satellite to being a planet? That is a crappy definition of moon IMO.
Re:What's in a moon? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:What's in a moon? (Score:2)
Maybe an old Apollo booster? (Score:4, Informative)
Space.com [space.com]
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Degraded orbit, hollow moon? (Score:2)
If you consider an object of mass m going around the earth at a certain radius r and velocity v the equations are:
Fg=GmM/r^2 and Fr=mv^2/r,
where M is earth's mass and G is the gravitational constant.
for a stable orbit Fg = Fr
-> GmM/r^2 = mv^2/r
simplifies to
-> GM/r^2 = v^2/r
and further
-> v^2 = GM/r
So looking at the final simplified equation for an orbiting body we see that it don't matter shit what the mass of that body is! You only need to have a certain speed to keep it on a steady orbit.
Re:Degraded orbit, hollow moon? (Score:2)
If you want to further complicate the situation it would be more accurate to say that moon does not orbit earth! In reality moon and earth have elliptical orbits and they both orbit around a point that is somewhere between moon's center and earth's center. So all of the previous talk is just approximation.. If you want to get even more detailed you should take into account relativistic effects too..
Re:Degraded orbit, hollow moon? (Score:2)
Re:Degraded orbit, hollow moon? (Score:2)
A much easier way to make the moon hit the earth is to slow it down, so that it takes up an elliptical transfer orbit with the perihelion underground.
Here, I drew some pictures [toronto.edu]. The one on the left has its orbit altered drastically, but it still misses the earth. The one on the right is slowed down enough so it falls into the earth; and it didn't need as much of a push.
This just adds more.... (Score:1)
Even if this does turn out to be a natural object, it is probable too small to be of any significance. One of these days we'll have to distinguish between a large boulder in space and a moon. Otherwise we might have to start counting particles of space dust.
Asteroids (Score:2, Funny)
Excuse me. How many objects are obiting the earth now? Twenty!? I'll be moving to Mars tommorow.
Re:Asteroids (Score:2)
No no no. This is actually Mr. Burns' long term plan to destroy the sun, again. The plan is to bring in so many rocks to orbit the earth, that the entire space surrounding us will be filled with such objects, preventing the dreaded sun from reaching us.
It may take another few hundred thousand years, but eventually, we will all fall under the sway of Burns Nuclear Power yet again.
criteria (Score:1)
4th moon hopes dashed. (Score:4, Funny)
Nasa and I had our hopes of a 4th moon dashed when that NSync kid couldn't cough up the money on time. He hadn't even read the fine print regarding a conditional return.
No mention of NORAD (Score:1)
Re:No mention of NORAD (Score:1)
The Martian Space Defence... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:The Martian Space Defence... (Score:3, Interesting)
* Sort of inner. Scientology is like a Mystic Onion. You peel it off layer by expensive layer until you reach the center of the onion. (Where you have nothing -- except tears.)
Stop laughing, this is science damn it!
Third-Moon a Disturbing Libertarian Myth! (Score:4, Funny)
We all have grown up with the notion that there are three earth-orbiting natural satlites, but did you know that there is no mention of the third satelite in any media before 2002!
It's true!
See, it's all a plot of the Libertarians - they have been secretly construcing this "third moon" in order to live there and to not pay any of their taxes - taxes that you and I need in order to buy delicious governemnt cheese!
Being cheap bastards, this new moon is nesesairly small - but if you look at it with a high-power "telescope", then you'll realise that this "moon" has been meticulously constructed to look like Montanna!
Complete with Moon-Sheep!
I urge you, the right minded American, to rise up and take a stand! No third moon, unless taxes are to be paid on it.
Re:Third-Moon a Disturbing Libertarian Myth! (Score:2)
It's all a plot! They're going to incinerate the planet!
Third "Moon"? (Score:2)
Re:Third-Moon a Disturbing Libertarian Myth! (Score:2)
Re:Third-Moon a Disturbing Libertarian Myth! (Score:2)
Kintanon
Re:Third-Moon a Disturbing Libertarian Myth! (Score:2)
No, no, you have it wrong (Score:2, Funny)
Cruithne is a drunken whore.
This little thing is a street urchin that gives blow jobs for crack money.
What makes it a moon? (Score:1)
Maybe, I'm wierd but.... (Score:1)
If this is true.. (Score:2)
By the way, I've always wondered- why don't we have a moon cam (maybe we do?)? Or some telescoping equipment on the moon to peer even further into our universe? How hard would it be to put a camera on the moon and have it beam pictures to a nearby satellite or whatever?
Re:If this is true.. (Score:2)
harder than putting one in orbit (since you have to land it), and half the sky would be blocked by the moon.
Re:If this is true.. (Score:2)
Yes, but the moon rotates (as it orbits around Earth). If you put the telescope on the equator, you'd see just as much of the sky in the course of a month as you would from the equator on Earth -- that is, just about all of it.
still, if you put the scope in orbit you can point it where you like when you like. and it doesn't have to stand against gravity, so it can be as big as you like.
in the early days, the inability to point a telescope at will caused some short-period variable stars to be misread as long-period, becuase their actual period was close to 24 hours.
Re:If this is true.. (Score:2)
Re:If this is true.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Ask Buzz what he thinks about it. (Score:2, Interesting)
It's Actually Moon #5 (Score:2)
How is Cruithne a moon? (Score:2)
Re:How is Cruithne a moon? (Score:3, Informative)
Cruithne isn't really a moon - it's a coorbital companion. And if you look at the Cruithne FAQ [queensu.ca] fm6 linked to, you'll see that it's not the only one. So if these coorbital companions counted as moons, this new object (if it isn't just a spent rocket booster) really would be the fifth moon.
Does the Earth have any other companions or moons?
Yes, the Moon. But apart from that, there are no natural objects known to be in close dynamical relationships with the Earth. NEW! Asteroid 1998 UP1 and 2000 PH5 have been found to be in similar relationships with our planet. We are currently (18 Sept 2001) working on publishing these results. Look for more info here soon.
Center, not gravity (Score:2)
Affectation, but no proximity (Score:2)
has anyone heard from (Score:2)
Ahhhh..... (Score:2)
Suspicious (Score:2)
Re:Suspicious (Score:2)
Re:Suspicious (Score:3, Insightful)
That's really backward. The main reason there is nothing about this story on the main page of CNN or MSNBC is that the american news media has barely reported anything non related to 9/11 this week. Comparing these news sources to the BBC is laughable, and an insult to those who provide proper and disinterested news reporting.
If you look at the BBC World Service [bbc.co.uk] news site, there are also many more very [bbc.co.uk] important [bbc.co.uk] news stories that will never make it to the mainstream US media outlets. It doesn't mean those stories are not important, they just don't help sell advertising.
Re:Suspicious (Score:2)
Ephemeris information for the object (Score:5, Informative)
To see the data:
Second moon: Cruithne (Score:3, Funny)
Fifth, not third (Score:2)
If you google for "Cruithne," the name of the second "moon," you'll find that researchers think there are two other objects in strange orbits like Cruithne's. That would make this new discovery the fifth.
Beat that, Jupiter!
This explains... (Score:2)
Music industry is gonna have a fit (Score:2)
"Moons River"
"Blue Moons"
"Sad Moons Nite"
Etc. Etc. Etc.
"We must protect the integrity and consistency of our content", said an anonymous industry spokesperson. "If you have to force legislation by any means available, we will."
The best things in life are three! (Score:2)
B.G. DeSylva, 1927, from _Good News_, (modified)
The moon belongs to everyone,
The best things in life are three.
The stars belong to everyone,
They gleam there for you and me.
The flowers in spring, the robins that sing,
The moonbeams that shine, they're yours, they're mine.
And love can come to everyone,
The best things in life are three.
Of course, Trinitarians could say
"And God belongs to everyone
The best things in life are Three."
What third moon? (Score:2)
Anybody known how to read NEO listings? (Score:2)
According to NEO [harvard.edu], "J002E3 was not a minor planet (Sept. 6.68 UT)". Does this means that they've already confirmed that it's space junk?
No definite size to be a "moon" (Score:2)
But there's no "official" definition of what a "moon" is, unless you happen to accept the particular definition of a particular person or group. If it's useful to call this 3-mile chunk of rock a "moon," then people probably will. If it's misleading or confusing, then (hopefully) people won't.
As for Cruithne (Score:2, Informative)
It orbits the sun in a horseshoe-shaped orbit that goes quite a distance above and below the elliptical plane. The horseshoe orbits overlap, but don't take 770 years. However, because these horseshoe-shaped orbits overlap, Cruithne eventually goes all the way around the sun. It is this that takes 770 years.
It is affected by Earth's gravity (indeed, that is why its orbit is shaped like a horseshoe), but that doesn't make it a satellite of Earth.
Therefore, this "third" moon is actually the second.
The second coming (Score:2, Funny)
That's no moon... (Score:2)
Sorry, someone had to say it...
They have arrived! (Score:2)
Scientists suspect object is space junk (Score:4, Interesting)
Scientists think a newly-found object orbiting the Earth could be a remnant from the Apollo era.
Experts at Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory believe its brightness and distance shows it's a rocket booster.
'J002E3' was discovered on September 3 and listed by scientists as a minor planet or asteroid.
But Nasa's Donald Yeomans believes that designation is erroneous.
He told Space.com: "It's most likely a spacecraft. It's not likely to be a natural object, not in that kind of orbit."
He said minor planets or asteroids tend to be on strange orbits gravitationally-influenced by the Sun. This does not appear to be the case with this object.
Nasa are currently running computer calculations and expect to be able to identify the object conclusively soon.
Story filed: 10:39 Thursday 12th September 2002
How to find out (Score:2)
Perhaps it is too dim to get a spectrum of. But, if they try hard/long enough eventually you can get a "print" I believe.
Re:Captured How? (Score:2, Informative)
Because in SOME frame of reference, the energy of the object doesn't change, this type of elastic collision CANNOT move an object from a bound to an unbound orbit.
Re:No one thinks its a UFO? (Score:2)
Re:No one thinks its a UFO? (Score:2)
Re:Why discovered by a amateur? (Score:2)
And you should see the setups that some of these amateurs have. (And I'm sure that CCD cameras and computers have done a lot to level the playing field when it comes to spotting like comets or sort-of-moon-things.)
And all the money that must be spent by governments? I'm sure a lot of people are rolling on the floor over that remark.
Re:Moons or no Moons (Score:2)
But I might be wrong.
Re:Moons or no Moons (Score:2)
Well, strictly speaking, planets and moons (and planets and suns) orbit around a common center of gravity. If the mass of one body is much large than the mass of the other, you get pretty close to an elliptical orbit, with the large mass at one focus.
It just depends on how accurate you want to be. For example, Jupiter is large enough that the center of mass of the Jupiter-Sun system is actually outside the photosphere of the Sun, but relative to the distance of Jupiter, that's not much.
One way astronomers look for extrasolar planets is to look for the star to 'wobble' as its planets orbit, so maybe there's a Little Green Astronmer out there somewhere who noticed that little yellow star in quadrant 57 wiggled approximately every 27.3 blurgons, meaning a large planet is orbiting.
Re:Moons or no Moons (Score:2)
Well I woulda thought that too... but where is the centerpoint of Charon's orbit around Pluto? Is it a double-planet? I dunno, you dunno, we dunno, they dunno. But isn't it nice that the terms are so vague we're all right?
Orbits aren't circular, they're elliptical, so it isn't that there's a center, it's that there are two foci, and the planet is at one of them. My question, then, is this: in the case of Pluto and Charon, is Charon at one focus of Pluto's "orbit around" Charon, just as Pluto is at one focus of Charon's orbit around Pluto? And what about the orbits of the Earth and Moon?
Re:It's a ufo (Score:2)
Even if it's man-made, it's still one heck of a job.
Re:Nothing to see here ... (Score:2)
You might have trouble getting change from a fiver though!