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Space Science

Five New Neptunian moons 36

cyclop writes "It's a new time of discoveries in the Solar System. Just when Cassini discovered two news moons on Saturn, old Earth-based astronomy strikes back by revealing five small bodies around Neptune. The faint moons seem to have eccentric and inclined orbits, and to have been captured by Neptune."
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Five New Neptunian moons

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  • Mission to Neptune (Score:5, Informative)

    by cephyn ( 461066 ) on Thursday August 19, 2004 @01:13PM (#10014426) Homepage
    Planetary scientists would LOVE a galileo/cassini type mission to neptune. The planet and its moons are just bizarre. It has normal looking full sized moons in retrograde orbit - which normally implies captured bodies...but they are usually irregularly shaped. It has goofy looking moons in normal orbits, which would normally imply a body formed with the planet...but those aren't usually irregularly shaped. And the big moon, Triton, is amazing...huge geyser/volcanic-like plumes of frozen black-stuff. There's theories as to what it is, but the underlying mechanisms aren't well understood. An amazing outer planet.
    • by ToshiroOC ( 805867 ) on Thursday August 19, 2004 @03:09PM (#10015756)
      Prometheus and JIMO first. Prometheus and JIMO are two overarching names for two similar projects - Prometheus specifies the development of nuclear reactors for generating electricity in space for spacecraft. JIMO stands for the Jupiter Icy Moons Orbiter.

      This is a huge development in interplanetary science, once they get it all designed - current technology can't begin to approach nuclear levels of power in space. The solar panels on the rovers bring in ~450watt/hr per day (up to 600 in the right orientation), but solar panels just don't give enough electricity once you start getting out away from the sun - Mars is about as far as you can practically go with solar panels. RTGs (radioactive thermal generators) provide power on the order of 1000-2000 watts for the newer ones, and notably less for the older ones - the 30+ year old Voyagers are running off of these, as is Cassini. Nuclear reactors are planned in the 100,000 watt range to begin with, scaling up to ~1,000,000 watts in the forseeable future.

      Science, once Prometheus gets off the ground, is no longer going to be centered around minimizing power usage, but maximizing science return. Ion thrusters, which use very little physical fuel but massive amounts of electrical power, become significantly more feasible for very long trips.

      And that leads to JIMO - Jupiter Icy Moons Orbiter. Nuclear powered, ion thrusters, all the science you could ask for. Looking at Europa and more.

      The only issue is to get Congress to stop cutting 100s of millions out of the Prometheus/JIMO budget - which they did for FY2005.

      AFTER all of this, once we have nuclear and ion propulsion down, we can go out to Neptune. Neptune is a much greater challenge because its much further out - you need more efficient thrusters and more power, and you also need much more powerful transmitters to get enough data back to earth.
      • AFTER all of this, once we have nuclear and ion propulsion down, we can go out to Neptune. Neptune is a much greater challenge because its much further out - you need more efficient thrusters and more power, and you also need much more powerful transmitters to get enough data back to earth.

        Alternatively, you can just use a bigger radio dish to receive the signals on Earth. The Voyager and Pioneer craft use RTEGs, but can still be heard as long as we're willing to spend the money to listen. It's only becom
        • Bigger radio dishes are in the works, but those aren't built yet - another concern for a later day. As it is, DSN (deep space network) recieve/transmit time on 70m dishes is massively expensive, and making these missions cost efficient is a big deal - so I see this as one of the major areas in which there could be improvement before outer solar missions.

          The reactors they are talking about actually aren't PBRs, I believe, but complex rod arrangements that allow reactors to be as inert as several hundred po
    • by Dark Lord Seth ( 584963 ) on Thursday August 19, 2004 @05:52PM (#10017408) Journal

      There are rumors out there of a planet that consists for 70% out of water. It's crust is broken up, creating a geologically interesting system. Due to a high-density atmosphere, it has severe variations in temperature... The farther away from the equater, the colder it becomes. However, the same atmosphere retains heat and causes the dark side of the planet to remain nearly the same temperature. The largest bodies of water on the planet are alive, with massive slow moving currents miles underneath the surface and magnetic activity in the atmosphere causese electrical discharges more powerful then mankind has ever been able to create. The core of this planet is made up out of molten metals and projects a gigantic magnetic field around the planet... Etcetera.

      Of course, I'm talking about Terra. Sol 3. Our Earth. Just a friendly reminder that practically ANY planet is, in it's own way, amazing. :)

      • There are rumors out there of a planet that consists for 70% out of water.[...] Of course, I'm talking about Terra. Sol 3. Our Earth.

        In a quick calculation from some numbers to hand I make it more like 0.0003%.

        Due to a high-density atmosphere, it has severe variations in temperature...

        Isn't the variation in temperatiure mostly due to difference in orientation to the sun.

      • Due to a high-density atmosphere, it has severe variations in temperature...

        Actually, due to the amount of liquid water on the surface, Sol3 has very slight variations in temperature. Prevailing currents carry heat from the equatorial regions to the poles.

        Retention of heat by large bodies of water and the 'high-density atmosphere also severely reduce the variation in daytime and nighttime surface temperatures. In contrast, temperatures on Mars, with its this atmosphere, vary from about 27 C daytime to

      • I agree that all the planets are uniquely fantastic. But many people think "Neptune? bah. just another gas giant. ho hum" -- or they think all moons are like our moon -- pretty much just a boring rock.
    • There was an interesting article on spacedaily.com (The case against Hubble) [spacedaily.com]
      which, although primarily about Hubble, mentioned the fact that NASA rejected a much cheaper mission option for a Europa-only orbiter costing around $1 billion in favour of the $8 billion JIMO mission. You could have 10 or more SEP/RTG missions for the cost of JIMO.. Solar can even be used for getting to Jupiter-Neptune, by swinging in close to the sun first & picking up momentum with SEP or a solar sail.. Just carry enough
  • From an astronomer (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Pi_0's don't shower ( 741216 ) <ethan&isp,northwestern,edu> on Thursday August 19, 2004 @01:15PM (#10014453) Homepage Journal
    Ground based astronomy isn't as sexy as space based astronomy, but has one big advantage -- light gathering power. We can build 8-meter (SUBARU and GEMINI), 10-meter (KECK), and in the near future 30 to 50-meter [noao.edu] telescopes. The JWST [nasa.gov], by comparison, is only 6.5 meters, and that's still 7 years away (at least). It's expensive to get telescopes into orbit, first off, and to send a probe up, well, you only get one look at the system with that! Additionally, launching anything drives the cost up by tens of millions of dollars. Ground based telescopes are easier to service, last virtually forever, and only have the disadvantage of having the atmosphere to fight with. Adaptive optics [ucolick.org], and camera technology have significantly advanced in recent years, so that ground based telescopes with adaptive optics have huge advantages over those without it. They haven't caught the space telescopes yet, but the gap is closing. I'm a huge advocate of hubble, chandra and other space-based missions, but what can be accomplished on the ground (such as this) [njit.edu] should NOT be overlooked!
    • by cephyn ( 461066 ) on Thursday August 19, 2004 @01:20PM (#10014511) Homepage
      regardless, even smaller space telescopes can still do some things better than ground based. I'm all for advancing and utilizing BOTH techniques as much as possible. More science == good. 8D
    • Instead of placing telescopes in orbit, we should be putting them on the moon. Low gravity and no atmosphere are a huge plus for building large aperture instruments.
      • Instead of placing telescopes in orbit, we should be putting them on the moon. Low gravity and no atmosphere are a huge plus for building large aperture instruments.

        At present, any instruments are manufactured on earth, and it takes a lot more to put anything on the moon than in orbit. So anything we could put on the moon would be a lot smaller and less capable than what we could put in orbit. Maybe someday if we had a moon base and actual manufacturing capability on the moon it could be possible. Arthu

        • Inflatable optics are a huge new field opening up - the idea is you either send up an optical-quality film that you can stretch out into a nice, HUGE, easily-altered-for-adaptive-optics mirror, or alternatively construct one in space (so you don't have to ruggedize it for the high-G-force ride into orbit). Look at BAA03-24 [eps.gov]for a quick glance at what the most recent round of funding was aimed at.
      • Instead of placing telescopes in orbit, we should be putting them on the moon.

        Where they can be even harder to service and be at the bottom of a gravity well to make sure lots of micrometeorites get sucked towards them?

        Low gravity and no atmosphere are a huge plus for building large aperture instruments.

        Isn't that a pretty good description of a location in orbit?

  • If it wasn't for Casini? After all, who had imagined moons this size before?
    • If it wasn't for Casini? After all, who had imagined moons this size before?

      Well, yes, Cassini had nothing to do with it. The five newly discovered moons of Neptune are larger than Mars' moons, which were known before space flight. The Galileo probe to Jupiter discovered numerous moons about the size of the ones recently found by the Cassini probe. The moons are being publicly reported now, but they were observed in 2001 to 2003, [bbc.co.uk] before Cassini got to Saturn.

  • Dammit, now Solarquest is even more out of date!
  • When will someone add those moons to orbiter?

    Orbiter's home page [ucl.ac.uk]
  • Cassini discovered two news moons on Saturn,

    Ah man, we get enough of news already here on Earth, it's all the same wherever you go, it's about time Cassini discovered some Enternainment Moons, that's what I'm talkin' about.

Math is like love -- a simple idea but it can get complicated. -- R. Drabek

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