Neptune's New Icy Companions 16
An anonymous reader writes "The Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics has announced new moons found around Neptune. The findings represent the first discovery of moons from ground-based telescopes in more than a half-century (1949), and required an international team to track and confirm. Notable about the ice-planet Neptune is also its largest moon-Triton-which is the coldest measured object in our solar system, and as a consequence even its volcanoes spew not lava, but ice."
Moon Size (Score:5, Insightful)
That's no moon... (Score:4, Funny)
(sorry. had to be done.)
Re:Moon Size (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Moon Size (Score:1)
Re:Moon Size (Score:1)
Re:Moon Size (Score:2)
That's easy (Score:1)
Hmm, not so easy afterall...Let me rephrase that.
Saturn obviously has millions of particles of various sizes in orbit. So...to be a moon, the body must be not only detectable, but individually discernable and uniquely identifiable. I don't think that there are any more requirements.
Re:Moon Size (Score:1)
Photos of Ice Volcano (Score:5, Interesting)
Eh...I think your mistaken! (Score:4, Funny)
moon-Triton-which is the coldest measured object in our solar system
*snip*
It is clear to me that NASA has not pointed thier little devices at my last CEO's heart....
Ice Volcanoes? (Score:1)
One time I was watching Speed 3, you know, the one where that guy from Flashback with Keefer Sutherland strapped a bomb to a glacier. He was all, "There's a bomb on the ice river. If it drops below one ince per year the bomb's gonna blow!" It was wicked-awesome.
Blurb misleadingly incomplete (Score:4, Interesting)
around Neptune. The same people (more or less) involved in this discovery have also been finding previously unknown moons around Jupiter and Saturn, using Earth based telescopes.
The cool (hee hee) thing here is that Neptune's largest moon, Triton, appears to be a recently captured Kuiper Belt object. The orbits of Neptune's other satellites should have some "memory" of the capture. But this is a bit like putting a Swiss watch back together after it's been hit with a hammer.