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Space Science

Earth's Second Moon 137

sbryant writes "According to the Daily Telegraph (free login required): the earth has a second moon called 'Cruithne', which was discovered by a British team. The moon was previously thought to be an asteroid, but the experts now tell us that Cruithne, which is 3 miles across (4.8km), is in fact a Trojan asteroid, and has an eccentric horseshoe orbit around Earth which takes 770 years to complete. "
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Earth's Second Moon

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  • such a long orbit around earth is bound to be unstable.

    are they sure it will return to earth again? how many times did it pass here before?

  • Marvel comics always knew it was there!
  • The Telegraph is as behind the times as ever. There was an SF novel published last year (Time by Stephen Baxter) which uses Cruithne as a plot device. The actual scientific announcement of Cruithne's somewhat unusual orbit was probably in 1998, but I'm not at home so can't check my references.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 25, 2000 @03:54AM (#1339287)
    UN: anoncoward PW: anoncoward
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 25, 2000 @03:54AM (#1339288)

    Many of you interested in anstronomy, or just the planets of the Solar System in general, might find this information [arizona.edu] very interesting. It's an account of other people who claimed to have discovered that Earth had a second moon.

    I'm not trying to discredit the British team's discovery in any way, but it's still a very interesting read.

    The main page of the site (called Nine Planets) is here [arizona.edu].

  • The only difference between an asteroid and a moon is whether it orbits the sun (asteroid) or another planet (moon).

    There is good reason to suspect, for example, that the moons of Mars are captured asteroids, along with Charon (Pluto's moon).


    --

    Greetings New User! Be sure to replace this text with a
  • by mat catastrophe ( 105256 ) on Tuesday January 25, 2000 @04:00AM (#1339291) Homepage
    as a devoted follower of the Zodiac, and how it affects me (i am totally aware of how my sign interacts with the planets to prevent me from obtaining any sort of good job or even a menial one) i am concerned... will this moon exert any pull over me as i try to appease the gods and the signs? will this alter my chances of attaining zen, although, being a devotee of astrology, i don't follow zen? should i worry that i was born under this moon and will never live long enough to see it return? this is too much for someone with no sense of self-determination!!!!!
  • by Psiren ( 6145 ) on Tuesday January 25, 2000 @04:02AM (#1339292)
    If memory serves me correctly, Crithne is an intricate part of the Sci-Fi novel, Time by Stephen Baxter. It mentions the horseshoe orbit and some other interesting things known about it. I didn't realise when I was reading it that the thing was for real. Very cool. You should check the book out if you're a Baxter fan. It's very good IMHO.

    "Sir, I'd stake my reputation on it."
    "Kryten, you haven't got a reputation."
  • by Gino ( 32932 ) on Tuesday January 25, 2000 @04:02AM (#1339293) Homepage
    Here is a link with some more [yorku.ca] info on the asteroid. Some cool animation as well showing the orbit. Gino

    ...by the pricking of my thumbs,

  • by ponyisi ( 13744 ) on Tuesday January 25, 2000 @04:03AM (#1339294)
    Exactly. Before anyone goes around talking about things they know nothing about (oops, too late), look at this [yorku.ca].

    Just for informational purposes, the asteroid was discovered in 1986, and the paper on its orbit was published in 1997.
  • by bug_hunter ( 32923 ) on Tuesday January 25, 2000 @04:03AM (#1339295)
    For it was fortold, that when the two moons shall be seen together that the oceans would rise, and the sun would never come up again. So it is written.

    Alternatively if we never see the two moons again might be for the same reason we never see Peter Parker and Spiderman or Bruce and Batman at the same time. When we are only "seeing" the dark side of the moon maybe it's getting into a slightly smaller dress and posing as the other one.
  • Why do I get the feeling this has been spawned from the worst SF novel of 1999, by Steven Baxter? Really, this truly was an awful book, and the asteroid/moon/whatever was used as some silly plot device. Could it be that some moron actually mistook fiction for fact, or did Steven Baxter actually get ONE DAMN THING RIGHT in the whole book? I'd be surprised.
  • by GregWebb ( 26123 ) on Tuesday January 25, 2000 @04:07AM (#1339297)
    Hey!

    You get plenty of kids asking for the earth for their birthdays, but on mine I get a moon! Not bad for a start, is it?

    :-)

    Greg
  • The orbit isn't technically *around* the Earth. The orbit is a sort of horseshoe shaped wobbly motion as the moon follows behind the earth.

    The moon isn't stable, and it will probably leave it's position within a few hundred years. There's some evidence that the moon was in a similar situation about 100,000 years ago. It sort of falls into place every once in awhile.

    As a point of interest, the first object discovered in such a peculiar horseshoe shaped orbit was a moon of an asteroid.

    A good website about these strange orbits is:

    right here [nasa.gov]
  • by auntfloyd ( 18527 ) on Tuesday January 25, 2000 @04:11AM (#1339301) Journal

    Not all of us are astrogeeks here. When does an orbiting body become a moon rather than as asteroid?

    ~~~~~~~~~
    auntfloyd
  • by Anonymous Coward
    This was first published in 1997!

    see http://www.asteroid.yorku.ca/

  • At approximately 12:50 last night, some sorority girl somwhere screamed in disgust as a frat butt loomed threateningly from a car window. Scientists say the new moon is stationary and appears to have a random orbit. If confronted by the moon, stay calm and move slowly as it may attack. Don't try to feed it as we do not need domesticated moons in the area. Thank you.
  • It's MONDAS! Aiii! Kit Pedler was right! The cybermen are here! (And it's not too far off from when the script said, either.)
  • by Anonymous Coward
  • by Guppy ( 12314 ) on Tuesday January 25, 2000 @04:17AM (#1339307)
    [Queen Mary and Westfield College, London]

    Scientists ignited renewed hopes for Extra-Terrestrial Cheese today, as they reported discovery of a second "moon" orbiting the earth. The asteriod, named Cruithne, was first discovered in 1986, but has only recently been subjected to detailed analysis of its highly eccentric orbit and dairyon emissions.

    The asteroid will remain in it's orbit for at least 5,000 years. "That's plenty of time for proper ageing," said one astronomer. "And with a diameter of 5 kilometers, this asteroid could supply the earth with Space Cheese for centuries."

    Thanks to whoever posted the article "Hidden Agenda [slashdot.org]".

  • by The Queen ( 56621 ) on Tuesday January 25, 2000 @04:35AM (#1339312) Homepage
    Born under the wobbling 'moon' Cruithne, you resonate with the sign of the Waffle. Your life is one of inconsistency, you bounce from job to job, relationship to relationship, never quite making that final connection. (On the other hand, you avoid conflict at all cost.) People see you as something of an enigma, following a different path than your peers. Since the conditions at the time of your birth will not come around again for another 700 years or so, you will never find contentment in this life. Hope that you are born again under a planet with a shorter orbit.

    The Divine Creatrix in a Mortal Shell that stays Crunchy in Milk
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 25, 2000 @04:35AM (#1339313)
    Cruithne truely is in a stable (ok it might decay in 5000 years according to the story) orbit but it isn't a moon. It is actually orbiting around one of the two stable points caused by the interaction of the gravity of the Earth and the Sun. If the Sun disappeared the Moon would continue in it's orbit of Earth, but Cruithne would not.

    The stable points in question are called the familar L4 and L5 (L is for Lagrange the French mathematician who originally discovered them). If I recall correctly, L4 trails the Earth in it's orbit by 60 degrees while L5 precedes the Earth by the same angle.

    I suspect that the reason Cruithne wasn't found before is because it probably has an exceptionally elongated orbit and is rather small. It is about the same distance away from Earth as the Sun is!

    Incidentally, for those that love to speculate on these things, I don't think it would take much effort to push Cruithne into a more stable orbit. If Cruithne happens to be solid rock (rather than a pile of gravel weakly bound by gravity), then it would make an ideal base for a space station or shipyard.

  • by Maul ( 83993 ) on Tuesday January 25, 2000 @04:36AM (#1339314) Journal
    I took a look at a few of the links below that people have posted about the meteor/satellite. According to the article, it is a "Trojan Satellite," which according to this [arizona.edu] link, which seems to imply that Trojan Satellites share the same orbit as the moon.

    However, This [yorku.ca] link says this asteroid actually shares an orbit with the Earth around the sun.

    Now, I know that this object has a rather unusual "orbit" of the Earth, but what exactly qualifies it as a bonafied Satellite rather than just a near Earth meteor?

    "You ever have that feeling where you're not sure if you're dreaming or awake?"

  • Hmm, good question. I think it's time to check my handy-dandy New Webster's....

    moon 1 n. the only natural satellite of the earth || any planetary satellite 2 v.i. to behave in a dreamy abstracted manner.

    So, not being a super astrogeek myself, I guess the key phrase would be 'planetary satellite'. If it orbits a sun, like all those other Asteroids in the Belt do, it's not a moon. Of course, if it's taking 770 years to make its rounds, I -guess- that could be caled dreamy, abstracted behavior, if those scientists have some sort of poetic streak....
  • The thing is only a few KM's long, you probably won't be able to see it with the human eye. I am surprised it has maintained the orbit. 770 years to complete is pretty unusal, it must have a lengthly orbit..and if so then wouldn't other gravitational forces interact with it?
  • by szyzyg ( 7313 ) on Tuesday January 25, 2000 @04:40AM (#1339318)
    Cruithne is a named Near Earth Asteroid which has been known about for some years. Asteroids only get names and numbers after their orbit is well known - which means a good few solar orbits.

    I've gone and higlighted it on my NEO map [arm.ac.uk] so you can all see where it is right now. (look near Venus). I presume this is the same object they're talking about.

    It's not actually a moon of the earth, at least I wouldn't consider it a moon. Trojan objects aren't bound to their objects in the same way that moons are. Certainly the Earth's influence acts to stabilise the orbit, but if that's teh only criteria for an object being a moon then perhaps we should consider Pluto a Moon of Neptune since pluto is help in the 3:2 resonance with Neptune.

    Oddly enough - the 1:1 resonance of trojan objects with respect to the Earth make it almost dynamically impossible for the object to ever become a true satellite of the Earth.

  • As another poster pointed out earlier, when it stops orbiting a star and starts orbiting a planet or some other body, as a result of being captured by the gravitational pull of that body.
  • The first pictures of the "new" moon were taken on December, 13th 1998... you don't believe? Look here! [userfriendly.org] ;-)
  • Cool, I tried the usual cypherpunks/writecode, this didnt work so I tried to register it and somebody already took cypherpunks (with another password) :-(

    Is there a new password for this recognized international user???????
  • by EngrBohn ( 5364 ) on Tuesday January 25, 2000 @04:50AM (#1339324)
    There's also good reason (IMO better reason) to suspect that Charon was originally part of Pluto, or that they were formed at the same time as the result of a collision.
    • Pluto's low mass would make it difficult for it to capture an independent Charon.
    • Charon has a very high mass relative to its parent body
    • In fact, Charon and Pluto revolve about their relative center of mass about halfway between the center of Pluto and Pluto's surface
    An interesting note (that would be I would be hard-pressed to claim as evidence supporting or countering my claim that Charon was not captured by Pluto) is that during Pluto's summer, its atmosphere encompasses Charon. It's so thin, though, that it doesn't affect Charon's orbit. During Pluto's autumn, the atmosphere "snows-out", and it won't have any atmosphere during winter. This is one of the reasons why launching a Pluto Fast Flyby was such a hot item a few years back -- they wanted to be able to study the atmosphere before it snowed-out. Now, it's not likely a probe will be able to do the flyby in time, but we can always hope & vote.
    Christopher A. Bohn
  • Just in case anyone wanted to go look for this puppy.

    It's a numbered asteroid (3753) so the orbit is well-determined. Right now it's within 60 degrees of the Sun so that's a little challenging (but Venus is always within 47, Mercury 17ish, so that gives some perspective).

    According to the Minor Planet Center [harvard.edu] it's presently at magnitude 16.2 in Scutum (approx R.A. 18h 34m, Dec. -14 11', but of course that's changing fairly quickly), with a solar distance of 1.205 AU and a distance from Earth of 0.56 AU. It has a diameter of about 17.5 km.

    Since it's in Scutum, that means it's also in the Milky Way so the chances of there being few 16th magnitude stars nearby is well, astronomical! :-)

    You can get up to date positions, etc. from the website listed above. Please be gentle - it's not a terribly fast server, and a lot of dedicated amateurs/professionals rely on it being available!

  • I've never seen the writecode password befroe.

    cipherpunk/cipherpunk and cypherpunk/cypherpunk are both commonly in use.
  • I do recall hearing about this a few months ago. As it turns out, Cruithne is not a moon in the general sense of the word -- it does not orbit Earth. A Trojan asteroid actually shares a solar orbit with its companion planet. Cruithne's orbit is highly inclined -- actually passing underneath Earth at some points -- and is quite mind-boggling to conceive.

    The orbit is a series of spiraling loops that form an overlapping horseshoe, with the Earth in the overlap. This orbital pattern therefore revolves around Sol along with Earth. Very strange, and pretty unusual (actual rarity is difficult to establish).

    Here are some decent drawings and explanations of the phenomenon. [yorku.ca]

  • Yes there is, and has been for a long time:
    cypherpunks/cypherpunks. Which does work on this site as it's how I got in.
  • by ChristTrekker ( 91442 ) on Tuesday January 25, 2000 @05:30AM (#1339333)

    I remember reading _Asimov on Astronomy_ many times as a kid. Here's what I remember from one of his articles:

    • A true satellite's "primary" gravitational influence is it's primary, naturally enough. (What's that? Well Terra is considered Luna's primary. Sol is Terra's primary. It's the body you revolve around.) Asimov did the calculations for most of the then-known satellites in the solar system. The outermost satellites of Jupiter and Saturn are not "true" satellites in this sense. Sol actually has more influence on them, but the primary has enough effect to keep them close by. They are probably captured bodies, and they may drift away in a couple centuries.
    • Interestingly enough, Luna is not a true satellite of ours. Our moon isn't really a moon! We're more like a double planet.
    • Double planets are coorbital. They each have their own orbit around the sun. The orbits are nearly identical, but they are convex. If the secondary body's orbit w.r.t. Sol is ever concave, then it is a satellite of the planet, i.e., the planet has more influence than the sun does. Terra and Luna do influence the orbit of each other gravitationally away from an ellipse, but not enough to cause a "dimple" in the shape.

    Anyway, as I read it, this asteroid is not a true moon in the sense of being a satellite of our planet. It still revolves around the sun. However, it is in a gravitational relationship with Terra, as our Luna is. In that sense I suppose it is "a moon".

    I think in that same book, maybe even that article, Asimov discussed the Trojan satellites. At that point I don't think anyone had discovered any for earth, but dust clouds were detected in the L4 and L5 positions.

    Astronomy is only a neglected hobby of mine, so I may not be totally correct. (I almost got a minor in it, but that's been years ago.)

  • Things like this have always fascinated me, I wish that I had more free time to spend learning about astronomy.

    A couple of years ago, I bought a set of Cosmos video tapes (the old Carl Sagan show). One episode discussed the creation of the universe and the origins of all the elements, etc. He made one quote that summed up my beliefs... "We are Star Stuff". Of course, I am not an astronomer nor an extert in nuclear physics, so I apologize in advance if I offend anyone (I have degrees in Civil Engineering).

    Sagan talked about fusion and so forth as well as how gold and other heavier elements are created by exploding super novas (as opposed to champagne super novas ). There is a certain simplistic beauty in the life of a star. It spends billions of years fusing hydrogen molecules into helium then in its dying days, it squeezes the helium molecules into other elements and in a spectacular "swan song" it explodes, seeding space with the basic building blocks of everything around us.

    I have often wished that I had enough time to research the parallels between astronomy and various religious beliefs. I think that there are some interesting things that can be concluded from that sort of research.

  • No, that's not a trojan satellite. A trojan satellite shows up in a place where we would *expect* a satellite, and therefore send probes and astronauts to explore it. It thus gains vital information about us, steals our technology, and uses our DNA to create an army of clones.

    They are a serious security threat. The first probe to an apparent sattellite should send a series of ^D to close any trojans before landing.

    :)
  • It has been a well known fact that there are dust clouds at the LeGrange points with the earth/moon system. I remember reading pieces about this in the early 1970s and I suspect that there were even earlier ones. Because such points form a potential energy well, random cruft collects there. However, for anything to be called a true moon, I would propose the following tests: 1) Is it bigger than a breadbox? 2) Is the orbit stable over several million years. The second is true with the dust clouds, and the first is true with this object. Both are not true with either this object or the dust clouds. Not to detract from the research which has more to do with the probablility of becoming toast from an asteroid collision and is well done, but a second moon? I think not.

  • by Anonymous Coward
    At the point where it is closest to Earth is it inside or outside Luna's orbit? I am wondering about the arabic symbol of the cresent moon with a star between the horns. Something that has been conjectured as "fantasy" or as asteroid strike. Now I wonder if ir was Cruithne passing in front of the dark side of the moon. I'd guess it would pass far outside Lunar orbit. However this is just the kind of stuff that shows the ancient world wasn't as backward as many in science would believe.
  • At its closest approach it is about .1 AU from Earth, which is quite a bit more than the mean Earth-Moon distance of 3.8e5 km. Additionally, it never would pass *between* the Earth and Moon since at the closest approach it is almost directly below the Earth's south pole.

    Intersting thought, though.
  • Your fellow AC claimed that it would be ideal for a space station if we are able to push it into a more stable orbit. I would assume that orbit would be around the earth alone, creating a smaller 'year' for Cruithne. I for one think it might be a good space station, it will reduce the costs tremendously; there is 'ground' up there to use.

    Also, does anyone know if Cruithne was part of the earth at one point, as the moon was?
    --
  • >As a point of interest, the first object
    >discovered in such a peculiar horseshoe shaped
    >orbit was a moon of an asteroid.

    I'm not sure to what you are referring. Can you be more specific?

    Then there are two two moons of Saturn (sorry, I forget the names) which are on real horseshoe orbits. I hear some astronomers actually beleived they were going to collide and tried to watch, only to see them gradually turn around. Hehe
  • Large, stable object already in earth orbit. Do you know how much money could have been saved on the ISS if they had only had something to bolt ot down to?
  • by Tau Zero ( 75868 ) on Tuesday January 25, 2000 @06:40AM (#1339350) Journal
    The orbit is not unstable; according to the Cruithne FAQ [yorku.ca], it will be stable for at least 10,000 years. The FAQ does not say if anyone has projected Cruithne's orbit back in time, let alone what the results were. Given the chaotic nature of 3-body interactions, we probably cannot determine the origin of Cruithne from its orbit alone. We will have to determine its composition to get an idea of where it came from, and send a probe past it to get some idea of its bombardment history (and thus where in the solar system it's spent most of its past). From this we might... might... be able to make some good guesses as to how long it's been Earth's orbital partner.
    --
  • hmmm, does this mean that love songs will need to be updated?

    <music>
    When the moons hit your eyes like ...
    <music&/gt;

  • This seems to be the same "moon" that which orbit was calculated a few years years ago, asteroid 3753. The asteroid was first found over ten years ago, but its orbit could not be calculated.

    It might also be that there are several such "Troyan" asteroids, so I'm not totally sure that this is the same one.

    I think the orbit was calculated by Seppo Mikkola in Tuorla Observatory, in University of Turku, Finland. But I'm not too sure about this, the following article seems to have two Finnish authors, but the primary author may well be British. It may be that the observations were British, or something like that.

    See:
    *Wiegert, P.A., *Innanen, K.A. and Mikkola, S. 1997: The Earth companion asteroid 3753 (1986 TO) - Nature 387: 685--686.

  • by coyote-san ( 38515 ) on Tuesday January 25, 2000 @06:50AM (#1339353)
    A quick history & science lesson. The first "trojan" objects discovered where clusters of asteroids in Jupiter's orbit, but 60 degrees ahead and behind of it. The name "trojan" refers to mythology (since Troy was considered a myth at the time), but I don't recall the details of why that name was picked.

    This cluster wasn't hard to explain - the "three body problem" can't be analytically solved for the general case, but it can be easily solved for cases where M1 >= M2 >> M3. This solution shows five points there the gravitational attraction of the two large bodies balance. IIRC all of these points are "stable," but objects can orbit those points for billions of years before friction with the solar wind, gravitational attraction from other objects, etc., cause the object to return to a normal orbit.

    The five Lagrange points are named L1-L5. As I recall, if M1 >> M2 then

    L1 = on M1-M2 line, opposite of M2 (e.g., "counter-earth")

    L2 = on M1-M2 line, between M1 and M2, (e.g., the solar observer satellite)

    L3 = on M1-M2 line, beyond M2

    L4 = 60 degrees ahead of M2 on M2's orbit

    L5 = 60 degrees behind M2 on M2's orbit

    Since it's been twenty years since I thought about this, I might have L1-L3 permuted and L4-L5 reversed.

  • You'd think the Electronic Telegraphers would have heard about Web Usability Research (Alertbox July 1999) [useit.com].
  • The trojan asteroids are found in the same orbit as Jupiter. The orbit at a stable gravity well formed by the interaction between Jupiter and the Sun. They follow Jupiter (or maybe lead, I can't quite remember) in the same orbit one sixth of the way around the sun. Trojan asteroids are classified solely by their pecular orbit, so that a former trojan asteroid orbiting Earth would no longer be a trojan asteroid.

    The concept of a "horseshoe" orbit is laughable. If it is in a closed orbit, that orbit must be an ellipse (see Kepler's first Law). A horseshoe is open ended, and while open ended orbits do exist, the object would only pass by the earth once in the orbit, achieve escape velocity, and never return.

    In other words this article, and yea verily this Slashdot post, makes no sense whatsoever.
  • The object was discovered by a British team, but it's "satellite" nature was not known until a Canadian team performed the analysis (contrary to an earlier posting which credited one at a... Turkish university?).

    Alors, we have a co-discovery... unreported, as is usual for matters of Canadian pride. But astronomy and other such international sciences is to be about the high purpose of fact and truth and the extension of knowledge's frontiers, not nationality or whatsoever nation a research happens to be working in. Consider all the discoveries by foreign (non-Chilean) researchers in Chile's Atacama Desert...

    By the by, there is some interest among a select band of Canadians to launch a probe to the asteroid...

  • (ok it might decay in 5000 years according to the story)
    If that's what the story says, the author didn't bother to read the available information (typical idiot reporter?). From the FAQ [yorku.ca] (emphasis mine):
    the possibility of a collision over
    at least the next ten thousand years is nil.

    --
  • by Tau Zero ( 75868 ) on Tuesday January 25, 2000 @07:03AM (#1339358) Journal
    how exactly is it ideal for a space station?
    Near as I can tell, it's probably not suitable at all.
    1. The orbit is inclined 20 degrees to Earth's. Change-of-plane maneuvers are very costly in terms of propellant.
    2. Being so close to the Sun, there is a smaller likelihood of Cruithne having deposits of the essentials for life-support: water, ammonia or methane ices. These would make it more attractive to set up shop there, because resupply costs would be drastically reduced.
    As it is, we're probably better off looking for something like an extinct comet nucleus, regardless of its orbit, if we want to set up a space station far from Earth.
    --
  • A "moon" is a natural celestrial body who's orbit is primarily dictated by a "planet". What is a "planet" is a discussion for another day. :-)

    The classical thought on this is that the orbit of these satelites are pretty eleptical and regular. Often times, these satelites are in "tidal lock" with their planet, just like our Moon is and most of the other moons out there with apriciable mass. In one sense, objects like this asteroid are satelites...they just don't follow a circular orbital path.

    People look up at the sky and look at our Moon, especially on nights like the recent Lunar Eclipse and forget how special that thing is. No where else in this star system will you find an object that big(the Moon) orbiting an object this small(Earth). Okay...Pluto is an exception too but Pluto is special in its own little way. :-) It makes me wonder if our planet and moon are more of the exception than the rule.
  • 770 years to complete is pretty unusal
    If you read the Cruithne page [yorku.ca], you'd know that Cruithne orbits the Sun roughly once a year. The 770 year figure is for the slow-dance of the Cruithne-Earth cycle.
    --
  • The name "trojan" refers to mythology (since Troy was considered a myth at the time), but I don't recall the details of why that name was picked.

    The asteroids at the two points 60 degrees before and after were, just after discovery, named after the Greeks and Trojans named in the Illiad. The prefered shorthand do describe those objects as a group became "trojans", which was later generalized to all objects in similar orbits.

    Steven E. Ehrbar
  • I'll confirm the above now. The 3753 or Cruithne was found by the above authors a few years ago.

    Wiegert is Canadian, and works with Innanen in York University in Canada. Innanen and Mikkola are Finnish, and Mikkola works in Tuorla Observatory.

    The asteroid has a homepage:
    http://www.asteroid.yorku.ca/ [yorku.ca]

    I think the British researchers photographed the asteroid in 1988, found it from the film plate, and possibly even made observations of its subsequent locations. They did not, however, calculate its orbit, and thus did not actually "discover" the asteroid as "second moon" of Earth. However, according to the rules, they were given the right to name the asteroid.

    It should be noted that there are probably thousands of asteroids which have been photographed, but have not been identified as asteroids. For example, Pluto was photographed in the Tuorla Observatory some 8 years before it was photographed and identified as a planet in U.S. There might be several hundred asteroids which have been identified, and their positions have been measured, but the orbit has not been calculated.

  • Here are some more links on Asteroids
    http://markn.users.netlink.co.uk /Arcade/aster.html [netlink.co.uk]
    http://www.atarihq.com/2678/revi ews/asteroids.html [atarihq.com]
    http://www.funescape.com/games/as teroids/main.htm [funescape.com] - Java required.

    -M
    -------------------------------------------- --------------
  • by Robert Link ( 42853 ) on Tuesday January 25, 2000 @07:33AM (#1339366) Homepage
    The name "Trojan" was picked because the first several asteroids found trapped in the Jupiter-Sun Lagrange points were named after heroes from Homer's Iliad. For that reason I would argue that "Trojan" should apply only to objects in the Jupiter-Sun Lagrange points, although the analogy to other Lagrange point objects is obviously pretty strong.


    Note also that there is a difference between "equilibrium" and "stability". Equilibrium just means that there exists a static solution to the equations of motion (albeit static in a rotating frame of reference in this case). Stable means that the static solution, if perturbed, will return to the equilibrium instead of drifting off into some dynamic orbit. The L1-L3 points are stable to perturbations in one direction (the tangential, if I recall), but they are unstable to perturbations in the other direction. Consequently, one doesn't expect to find long-lived orbits at these locations. The L4 and L5 equilibria are stable against all perturbations, so one might expect to find objects in long lived orbits at these locations, like the Trojan asteroids, for instance.


    The original poster's confusion arose because the earth has two sets of Lagrange points associated with it. One comes from the earth-moon system (in which the earth is M1 and the moon is M2), and the other comes from the earth-sun system (M1==sun, M2==earth). An object at L4 or L5 in the earth-moon system would appear to orbit the earth in synch with the moon, while an object at an earth-sun lagrange point would appear to orbit the sun in synch with the earth. So, it's a little far-fetched to call an object at the earth-sun Lagrange points a "second moon", although such an object is in some sense more deeply associated with the earth than an object in some random solar orbit.


    Finally, one should remember that the Lagrange points are solutions of the restricted 3-body problem which presumes that there are only three bodies in the system. Obviously, that isn't the case in our solar system. For instance, I've seen people argue that the earth-moon L4 and L5 points aren't really stable because of the sun's influence. Similarly, the lagrange points between the sun and most of the outer planets are thought to be disrupted by Jupiter's gravity. Consequently, I wouldn't be surprised if Venus' gravity had a tendency to destabilize the earth-sun Lagrange points, resulting in objects trapped there eventually escaping into regular solar orbits.


    -r

  • >"Incidentally, for those that love to speculate on these things, I don't think it would take much effort to push Cruithne into a more stable orbit.
    >If Cruithne happens to be solid rock (rather than a pile of gravel weakly bound by gravity), then it would make an ideal base for a space station or shipyard." Let's do it.
  • The concept of a "horseshoe" orbit is laughable. If it is in a closed orbit, that orbit must be an ellipse (see Kepler's first Law).

    Ahhh... Newtonian mechanics. BTW - Newton got thoroughly beaten by this little theory published by some guy named Einstein earlier this century.

    But seriously... Newton's law's don't work very well for "n" bodies problems, where n > 2. Furthermore, there are some serious non-linear differential equations that come into play for something as complex as this. Think of it this way:

    The asteroid would follow an elliptical orbit if all the other bodies acting on it stood still. Since the Earth, Mars, Venus, etc... are all moving, and in doing so act on each other, the "ellipse" gets smeared into this weird kidney bean shape. The stability of this orbit is questionable, and certainly this solution to the problem of co-existing with all the other planets/planetoids is rare. But it is certainly possible.

    Temkin

  • Heh, just being a proper anoncoward, I thought that I'd point out that another reason that the atmosphere "doesn't affect Charon's orbit" is that the two bodies are syncronous in orbit and rotation. Kinda like how the same side of the moon always faces the earth, the same side of Charon always faces Pluto, and as a bonus, the same side of Pluto also always faces Charon. So there's no relative motion bewtween the two. Think of it as a nonrotating satellite in geosynchronous orbit. Just another Anonymous Coward!
  • My point whas that it has to be closed. No planet or asteroid is in a perfect ellipse.

    I recieved an email from someone trying to debunk what I said. He referenced a webpage that is very informative. http://www.asteroid.yorku.ca/ [yorku.ca].

    This shows the asteroid's true colors. It does not orbit Earth. It orbits with Earth, much like the trojans around Jupiter, but a little more funkily. It is not a moon. That is what threw me about the "horseshoe" orbit.
  • Slashdot: Science: Marriot to Open Resort on Cruithne

    Great, the way he said "the earth now has a second moon. Its name is Cruithne. Luv dat.

    Where is my mind?
  • by Anonymous Coward
    But it could possibly make a sweet deep space observatory. Imagine what neat photos we could collect out there. There would such amazing sights to see. I doubt that it would be possible or cost effective to build anything there though, and Nasa couldn't have a second chance.

    We should just ask Mr. Gates if he would like to make a small donation of $500M for a second earth orbiting telescope project instead.

    Loren.

  • http://www.register.com/whois-results.cgi?domain=c ruithne.com

    Jeez.
  • How in hell is this interesting? Its funny and cannot be clasified as anything else. But then, thats my viewpoint. Yes I know this is offtopic and deserves to be moderated down. So it will cost me a few karma points. But those are minor compared to this. Interesting would be something that is useful in evaluating the story, but does not shed direct light on it.
  • I was thinking of the moon orbiting Ida. The moon's name is Dactyl. Anyway, I just looked it up and I was wrong. Dactyl is in a regular circular orbit around Ida.

    This link has more info [nasa.gov]
  • The idea is that the moon orbits both Earth and Sun. With such a system, you can get much more complex orbits.

    For example, just by combining two ellipses (one around Earth and one around Sun), you can get weird orbits.

    Actually, none of the orbits of the planets are "perfect ellipses around the sun", but because the planets also orbit each other a little (although those orbits are "open"), the actual orbits of planets are infinitely complex. And, chaotic. (Remember, three-object problem has not been solved.)

  • Real men don need no steenkeng artafishul gravety.

    The ISS isn't projected to have 'simulated gravity' except in specific lab areas.
  • by Tau Zero ( 75868 ) on Tuesday January 25, 2000 @10:27AM (#1339385) Journal
    But it could possibly make a sweet deep space observatory.
    What could you see from there that you couldn't see from here?
    • You still have the Zodiacal light fogging your pictures of nebulae; to get away from that, you need to go further from the Sun.
    • You can't see much more of the Sun from a 20-degree inclined orbit. For that you really want a polar orbit. If you want to see solar flares and prominences from a different angle, you'd want to be at the Earth-Sun L4 or L5 point instead of on Cruithne, which varies its angular separation from the Earth-Sun line throughout the year.
    • You can't see much more of the sky from Cruithne than you can from the Moon's L4 or L5 point, and it's a lot faster to get data back from the shorter distance.
    • Last and most significant: what kind of observatory needs to be gotten away from Earth and put on a rock somewhere out in the middle of nowhere, so that you can still only see the half of the sky it doesn't block? Why not a free-flying probe?
    An observatory which is best suited to Cruithne than somewhere else would have to have some very specialized requirements. I can't think of anything that has requirements remotely like that. Note: I am not an astronomer.
    --
  • Here ya go.

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk:80/et?ac=00206823151921 1&rtmo=VMM83qJK&atmo=YYk7k37p&pg=/et/00/ 1/25/nmoon25.html
    --
    - Sean
  • I clearly made the wrong choice of words. I didn't mean a perfect ellipse. I ment to distinguish a closed orbit from a open orbit such as a parabolic or hyperboic orbic, and I foolishly used the word parabolic.

    As I said in a reply to a reply, this asteroid is not a moon of Earth's. It does not orbit the earth, it is just heavily affected by it. If it were orbiting the earth the horseshoe orbit would make little sense. Although I guess a very small asteroid could be affected by the moon in such a way, but because the gravity wells are so much smaller it would be far less stable and therefore less likely to happen.
  • Nice Map by the way but:

    ...even conservative estimates would suggest that for every asteroid on a dangerous Earth-Approaching orbit there are hundreds more which have yet to be discovered. There are over 300 known objects on Earth-crossing orbits, the majority of which are potentially capable of causing death and destruction on a scale unheard of in human history.

    This is not a happy thought to have on a regular Tuesday.
    I wanted that movie Armegeddon dead and buried!!! Now that I hear how possible it is I shudder to think...
    ---

  • Cruithne is more similar to our moon than you may think. Our moon actually is more closely bound, gravitationaly, to the sun than to the earth, like Cruithne. If you look at Moon's path for a year, it is always concave towards the sun, with twelve or thirteen flatter points (when the earth was further from the sun than the moon).

    So both Cruithne and Moon trace out a repeatable path with respect to the Earth, but both can be considered to really orbit the Sun.

    --Neal

  • Hellium, really. Elements between Hellium and Iron are created in normal stars. However, without a supernova, these elements never leave the core.
  • by Dopefish ( 33181 ) on Tuesday January 25, 2000 @02:33PM (#1339399)

    Does this mean that Russia can beat JFK's challenge of the early '60s to send men to the moon first?

    You still have a chance, Russia! RUN! RUN!

  • Rob, I submitted the same story with a whole lot more useful links and detail in it.

    If you wanted to post it yourself, that's fine; but at least include the links, to make the story more useful to folks.
  • Technically...doesn't every peice of shit that we put into orbit qualify as a moon?
  • To be serious here, what if some country attached a device to slowly push this thing into the earth? Carl Sagan argued _against_ anti-asteroid devices for fear that they could be used in this way as a weapon. I say we destroy it into space dust somehow or send it into the sun before some crazy enemy develops the technology to go and fetch it.
  • We ought to do this at every site that requires free registration:

    Username: Slashdot (case-sensitive)
    Password: Slashdot
    --
    Patrick Doyle
  • I believe Venus' L5 point is where Venus Equilateral [best.com] was placed [amazon.com].

  • At the bottom it says POV Ray was used for the animations. It's an open source asteroid!

  • space.com [space.com] has an article about Cruithne as a moon, "More Moons Around Earth? It's Not So Loony" [space.com], from October 29...
  • by Anonymous Coward
    You were almost right. From the webpage at http://www.asteroid.yorku.ca/faq.html :

    "Are there any other known horseshoe orbits?

    There is only one other known case, involving the small moons Janus and Epimetheus of the planet Saturn. Janus plays the role of the Earth in that case, and Epimetheus that of Cruithne."

  • A better place to put an observatory is the far side of the main moon. This will allow full spectral seeing without RFI from the earth. The communications can be done by placing the observatory on the far side where it can see the Earth-Moon L4 or L5 point, then put a relay satellite at the L4 or L5 point.

    Other than that, I agree that Cruithne is essentially worthless as an observatory. If we wanted one further out than the moon, there's always the Sun-Earth L4/L5 points, as well as other planets, or their Lagrange points, or the larger asteroids. But close in would be suitable for me, as we would need to be generating a lot of data from it to keep all those seti@home computers busy :-)
  • Another good story on CRUITHNE, the astronomical object formerly known as an asteroid, is at space.com. [space.com]

    I wonder why this is a story now?

    \/0!d

  • Here is the article that the Telegraph seems to have based their article off of http://www.space.c om/science/solarsystem/second_moon_991029.html [space.com] More informative, and no registration necessary.
  • But see "Near Earth Asteroid 3753 Cruithne"

    http://www.asteroid.yorku.ca/

    It does NOT orbit Earth and it therefore is NOT Earth's second moon. It does have a Keplerian elliptical orbit about the Sun but this orbit isn't the same as the Earth's and doesn't intersect it.

  • Hmm, a large, stable object already in Earth orbit. [seds.org]

    Now where would we find something like that?

    Too bad it'd be beyond our technology to get there. [nasm.edu]
  • That's easy:

    THROAT WOBBLER MANGROVE

    Your Working Boy,
  • We actually haven't predicted the rest of the solar system's orbit for much longer than 10 millenia or so. It takes quite a lot of power to get a reasonably accurate prediction for timescales like these.

    If any astro-computer geeks out there feel like showing off, I happen to know that there's research money out there for this.

  • Here's an applet simulating Cruithne's orbit for as long as you care to watch it. I don't know how accurate it is, but it does show the horseshoe orbit and start to fall apart around 5000 years just as the article said. http://burtleburtle.net/bob/physics/cruithne.html

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