In the red corner, Jupiter, the largest planet orbiting our
sun, which shaped our solar system with its gravitational bulk.
In the blue corner, Saturn, the magnificent ringed world
with bewildering hexagonal storms at its poles.
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An undated approximate
natural-color photo of Saturn, its rings, and four of its icy moons.
These two giant worlds are late in their bout for
satellite-based supremacy. But now the fight over which planet has the most
moons in its orbit has swung decisively in Saturn’s favor.
This month, the International Astronomical Union is set to
recognize 62 additional moons of Saturn based on a batch of objects discovered
by astronomers. The small objects will give Saturn 145 moons — eclipsing
Jupiter’s total of 95.
“They both have many, many moons,” said Scott Sheppard, an
astronomer from the Carnegie Institution for Science in Washington, DC But
Saturn “appears to have significantly more,” he said, for reasons that are not
entirely understood.
The newly discovered moons of Saturn are nothing like the
bright object in Earth’s night sky. They are irregularly shaped, like potatoes,
and no more than 1.6km or 3.2km across. They orbit far from the planet too,
between 6 million and 18 million miles, compared with larger moons, such as
Titan, that mostly orbit within a million miles of Saturn. Yet these small
irregular moons are fascinating in their own right. They are mostly clumped
together in groups, and they may be remnants of larger moons that shattered
while orbiting Saturn.
A photo of Saturn’s tiny moon, Pan, taken from the Cassini
spacecraft on March 7, 2017.
“These moons are pretty key to understanding some of the big
questions about the solar system,” said Bonnie Buratti of NASA’s Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in California and the deputy project scientist on the upcoming
Europa Clipper mission to Jupiter. “They have the fingerprints of events that
took place in the early solar system.”
The growing number of moons also highlights potential
debates over what constitutes a moon.
“The simple definition of a moon is that it is an object
that orbits a planet,” Sheppard said. An object’s size, for the moment, doesn’t
matter.
The new moons were discovered by two groups, one led by Sheppard
and the other more recently by Edward Ashton of the Academia Sinica Institute
of Astronomy and Astrophysics in Taiwan. Sheppard’s group, in the mid-2000s,
used the Subaru Telescope in Hawaii to hunt for more moons around Saturn.
An photo of Saturn’s tiny moon, Pan, visible as a tiny
shining dot in the Encke Gap of Saturn’s A ring, taken from the Cassini
spacecraft on March 5, 2008.
In March, Sheppard was also responsible for finding 12 new
moons of Jupiter, which took it temporarily above Saturn in the scuffle to be
the biggest hoarder of moons. That record was short-lived, it seems.
Ashton’s group, from 2019 to 2021, used the Canada France
Hawaii Telescope, a neighbor of the Subaru Telescope on Mauna Kea, to look for
more of Saturn’s moons and to verify some of Sheppard’s discoveries. For a moon
to be authenticated, it must be spotted multiple times to “be sure the
observations are a satellite and not just an asteroid that happens to be near
the planet,” said Mike Alexandersen, who is responsible for officially
confirming moons at the International Astronomical Union.
Most of Saturn’s irregular moons orbit the planet in what
astronomers call the Inuit, Norse and Gallic groups. Each group’s objects may
be the remains of larger moons, up to 241m across, that once orbited Saturn but
were destroyed by impacts from asteroids or comets, or collisions between two
moons. “It shows there’s a big collision history around these planets,”
Sheppard said.
A mosaic of photos taken
from the Cassini spacecraft on June 11, 2004, of Phoebe, one of Saturn’s small
moons.
Those original moons may have been captured by Saturn “very
early on in the solar system,” Ashton said, perhaps in the first few hundred
million years after its formation 4.5 billion years ago. Not all orbit in these
groups, however, with a few rogue moons orbiting in a retrograde direction —
that is, opposite to the orbits of the other moons.
“We don’t know what’s happening with those retrograde
moons,” Sheppard said. Ashton suspects they may be remnants of a more recent
collision.
Learning more about the new moons is difficult owing to
their small size and remote orbits. They appear to be a special class of
object, different from asteroids that formed in the inner solar system and
comets in the outer solar system. But not much more is known.
“These objects might be unique,” Sheppard said. “They might
be the last remnants of what formed in the giant planet region, likely very
icy-rich objects.”
NASA’s Cassini spacecraft managed to observe about two dozen
of the moons around Saturn up to its demise in 2017. While not close enough to
study in detail, the data did allow scientists to “determine the rotation
period,” of some of the moons, the spin axis and “even the shape,” said Tilmann
Denk from the German Aerospace Center in Berlin, who led the observations.
Cassini also found abundant ice on the surface of one of the larger irregular
moons, Phoebe.
Closer observations of Saturn’s tiny moons could give
scientists a window into a tumultuous time in the early solar system. During
that period, collisions were more common and the planets jostled for position,
with Jupiter thought to have migrated from nearer the sun farther out to its
current orbit. “That gives you additional information on the formation of the
solar system,” Denk said.
Yet the irregular moons we are seeing so far may only be the
beginning. “We estimated that there are potentially thousands,” around Saturn
and Jupiter, Ashton said. Uranus and Neptune, too, may have many such irregular
moons, but their vast distance from the sun makes them difficult to discover.
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