New Moon of Uranus Discovered 57
paulnuyu writes "A group of international astronomers have found a new moon orbitting Uranus. This brings Uranus's total moon count to 21. The newly discovered moon is speculated to be a remaining fragment from a collision that occured when the solar sytem was still forming."
hmmm (Score:2, Funny)
Re:hmmm (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
farther out = more moons? (Score:4, Insightful)
is most of the space matter in our solar system stuck in the L4, L5 points, and thus doesn't find it's way into the inner regions of the solar system? or is it just that the enormous mass of the farther out planets seems to attract more mass & thus has a higher chance of a rock entering orbit (as a result of a larger margin of error for stable orbit due to the size of the planet). it just seems to be more than coincidental....
or is it just a possiblity that these planets have a particularly large asteroid in an unstable orbit just long enough to discover and document, before it a) leaves orbit or b) gets sucked into the atmosphere?
Re:farther out = more moons? (Score:2, Informative)
The L4, L5 points of what exactly? Of the solar system? I hate to be the one to break this to you, but there are just a few more than two masses floating around out there. Lagrange points only apply to the two body problem, any more than that and the dynamics become incredibly complex.
Mercury's a tiny little thing that would be lucky if it could capture my desk much less a sizeable mass (exaggeration). Mars is large but still rather puny though you should note that it does have moons of its own, more than us though they are smaller. Venus could hold something like our moon, but apparently the crapshoot of the universe favored Earth instead.
Outside the belt, we've got bloody HUGE planets compared to the dinky inner pebbles. Pretty much any rock floating around can be captured by them (as long as its solar orbit is not too extreme) but in comparison there are plenty of bodies that could never be captured by an inner planet no matter the orbit.
Re:farther out = more moons? (Score:1)
i was under the impression that the asteroid belt was largely influenced by the gravitation of the sun and jupiter
I hate to be the one to break this to you, but there are just a few more than two masses floating around out there.
last time i checked, jupiter was 1000x as large as earth, and at least 50x as large as the next largest contender.
Re:farther out = more moons? (Score:3, Informative)
(Data from here [gsu.edu], specifically these [gsu.edu] pages [gsu.edu].)
Re:farther out = more moons? (Score:5, Informative)
I think perhaps the best way to look at the terrestrial (aka, inner) planets - moon-wise - is that they don't form with moons, so any moons we find are probably anomalous in some senses. Earth's Moon is a bit of a freak, having formed in a very stochastic even. Mars's two moons are most likely captured asteroids. Venus and Mercury are in some ways more like what I'd expect to see in a large fraction of a larger terrestrial planet population.
The outer solar system has it good, moon-wise. First off, the giant planets are thought form with accretion disks about them in the later stages. (I believe Canup and Ward have a paper coming out on this topic in Astrophysical Journal in not too long.) This makes a good place to form moons, it is thought.
It gets even better, though. The jovian planets also probably had larger gas envelopes early on, making it easier to capture a moon (like Triton). You need some way to ditch energy in order for capture to occur, and drag is a nice method.
And better still: it's easier for giant planets to affect objects in their area. Their Hill spheres (domains of gravitational dominance compared with the Sun's gravity) is larger thanks largely in part due to their greater distances from the Sun. This leaves a larger volume around them in which they can start to mess with small bodies and potentially capture them, under the right conditions.
All in all, if you want to either form (in situ) or capture a moon, the outer solar system is your best bet. It's still possible to pull some tricks in the inner solar system, but they're less likely.
Re:farther out = more moons? (Score:2)
My only idea is that Triton, which is pretty big as moons go, and an order of magnitude more massive than anything around Uranus may have knocked smaller moons of Neptune out of orbit when it arrived. But what do I know.
Re:farther out = more moons? (Score:2)
What you are (possibly) forgetting about Neptune is that being farther from the Sun makes it also farther from the Earth. Finding moonsa around Neptune is even more difficult than finding them around Uranus (which is in turn more difficult than finding them around Saturn, etc). Besides being farther away from us, the light out there dimmer. (Neptune is about half-again as far from the Sun as Uranus, which translates to leass than 1/2 the light per area.) Before deducing much about the relative numbers and what they mean, I think we should wait for significantly more complete satellite searches around all 4 giant planets.
Of course, you might be right. Neptune might have fewer moons in the end. Then it could be because of Triton (being both very massive and in an irregular orbit might make it an impedment to other moons' existences). There might also be other effects. Or maybe I was over-generalizing the processes. But I'm not ready to start worrying yet.
Re:farther out = more moons? (Score:1)
Re:farther out = more moons? (Score:1, Informative)
Mercury 0.0552
Venus 0.8150
Earth 1.0000
Mars 0.1074
Jupiter 317.83
Saturn 95.16
Uranus 14.5
Neptune 17.1
Pluto 0.0025
Re:farther out = more moons? (Score:2)
An early protoplanet slammed into Earth, vaporizing rock, etc... The force of the impact ejected a large part of the Earth's mass. It eventually cooled and settled into its own suborbit around the reforming earth.
This theory has been propped up somewhat by analaysis of the Moon's structure. Luna seems to be composed of rock like you would find in the Earth's mantle, but has a noticeable lack of a magnetic or electrical field, indicating that it doesn't have a lot of iron or nickel, which you would expect to find if it had formed independantly of Earth.
Bottom line-- The moon has the highest ratio of mass to its parent body as than any other moon in the Solar system. If we didn't arbitrarily consider Luna a moon, it would be a lot more correct to say that the Earth-Moon system was a dual planetoid system and not a planet-moon system.
Re:farther out = more moons? (Score:1)
Re:farther out = more moons? (Score:2)
Relative motion has its idiosyncrasies.
Urectum..? (Score:2)
Re:Urectum..? (Score:1)
Why not Urinous? (Score:1)
At least I find the yellow stuff less offensive...
- Peter
Re:Why not Urinous? (Score:1)
Mercury- Roman Messenger God
Venus- Goddess of Love
Mars- God of war
Jupiter- God of the Sky
Uranus- God of the Earth (as in rocky Earth, not the planet)
Neptune- God of the Seas
Pluto- God of Death
And now you know why we don't arbitrarily change names of planets to prevent slack-jaw yokels from mispronouncing them as portions of someone else's anatomy.
Re:Why not Urinous? (Score:1)
Yes, I know... (Score:5, Funny)
You know, on second thought, screw that crap. This joke never gets old. The more I think about "21 moons on Uranus" the more I crack up. Pun intended. Just allow yourself to laugh at this, and maybe even let it lighten up the rest of your day. It has mine.
I also can't wait until a story comes along about how scientists "find" a small chance that there could be frozen water, which could indicate the slim chance of life. In turn, there'll be all the boring threads about the seti@home project and distributed computing to look forward to--certainly more pertinent than this post of course, but what the hell...
Re:Yes, I know... (Score:1)
Re:And the bit from Futurama (Score:4, Funny)
Fry:Just don't point it at Uranus..
Professor:Very funny Fry, we changed that planets name years ago just to get rid of that stupid joke.
Fry:What did you call it?
Professor:Urectum.
Mmm? Moons, did you say? (Score:1)
Dunno about moons. My doctor said they were asteroids... Something like that.
I wish he'd speak up. So young these days, aren't they? Doctors, I mean.
What was I saying? Oh, yes. Titania. In my ears... I think that's what he said. Isn't that a moon? Couldn't hear him over the damn noise.
Re:Mmm? Moons, did you say? (Score:1)
Re:Yes, I know... (Score:1, Funny)
He walks toward the door... "So, you can imagine what a one kilogram mass would weigh on Earth, but what would it weigh on SATURN OR UR-(opens door)-ANUS?"
It's not pronounced "your anus" (Score:2)
Re:It's not pronounced "your anus" (Score:1)
Many Moons (Score:4, Interesting)
Thinking about it, 21 significant orbital bodies accompanying a planet the size of our own would create nightmares for people trying to predict the tides, and we'd have to get some pretty serious seismic activity from any significant alignment.
Even worse some form of collision is almost inevitable over the full expanse of time, moons ricocheting like billiards around the sky [joking].
Give a lot of options for moon bases too - countries could argue over who gets the biggest or best situated. I guess we'd lose the use of the L points as a side effect though (or there'd be L orbits weaving monstrously complicated paths though the orbits of the moons)...
Re:Many Moons (Score:1)
This 'moon' is 12 miles wide. Earth's moon is roughly 2000 miles wide. The article doesn't say what the radius of the orbit was, but it doesn't really matter. Something roughly 1/1000th the size of our moon at even half the distance would still be all but invisible.
Which begs the question that has been asked many times before... exactly what qualifies something as a 'moon'? Something tells me that the definition makes discoveries like this much less draumatic.
=Smidge=
Re:Many Moons (Score:4, Insightful)
Caring (Score:2, Insightful)
Are astronomers ever going to stop caring about new satellites? If so, when?
It is obvious that there is all sorts of stuff floating around the solar system, some of which is in orbit around other non-solar objects.
Does knowledge about a 21st moon of a remote planet really increase our understanding of anything?
Re:Caring (Score:2)
Re:Caring (Score:3, Insightful)
Does knowledge about a 21st moon of a remote planet really increase our understanding of anything?
I know. As a matter of fact, it does. If we only had a handful of moons to look at, we'd never really know to what extent the trends we see are just statistics of a few and to what extent they reflect real underlying physical processes at work. Each additional moon adds to the statistics. Individually they aren't wildly important. Collectively, larger numers of moons lead to better theories of where this little guys come from. Brett Gladman, who received the annual Urey Prize for the Division for Planetary Sciences this year, gave a talk about irregular satellites. Having been in the audience, I can tell you that having many moons on there made the trends a lot more believeable than had there been only, say, 5 data points.
If you're asking if each new moon is worth of a headline or even a Slashdot story, I'd agree that it really isn't. But if you're wondering if we should bother looking for these moons, I'd have to say yes, absolutely.
Re:Caring (Score:1)
Size (Score:3, Informative)
Wow. In 100 years we'll have space stations that big. it's hardly Moon (x00miles+) size is it? Y'know theres a golf ball floating arround the Earth's moon - a moon of a moon?
Re:Size (Score:1)
Re:Size (Score:2)
Wow, two new moons reported in less than a month! (Score:1)
Or maybe it's yet another one of Timothy's reposts [slashdot.org] ...
Moon, shmoon... (Score:1)
no jokes ... please (Score:2)
What should it be called? (Score:1)
ObIKnowTheyNameTheseThingsAfterShakespeareanCha
Really a moon? (Score:1)
your anus (Score:2)
[auto-mod +3: Funny]
Are they sure... (Score:2)