Natural satellite (original) (raw)
The term moon (never capitalized) is used to mean any natural satellite of the other planets. There are, at least, 102 moons within Earth's solar system, and presumably many others orbiting the planets of other stars. Typically the larger gas giants have extensive systems of moons. Mercury and Venus have no moons at all, Earth has one large moon, Mars has two tiny moons, and Pluto a large companion called Charon (sometimes considered to be a double planet).
Most moons are assumed to have been formed out of the same collapsing region of protoplanetary disk that gave rise to its primary. However, there are many exceptions and variations to this standard model of moon formation that are known or theorized. Several moons are thought to be captured foreign objects, fragments of larger moons shattered by large impacts, or (in the case of Earth's moon) a portion of the planet itself blasted into orbit by a large impact. As most moons are known only through a few distant observations through probes or telescopes, most theories about them are still uncertain.
Most moons in the solar system are tidally locked to their primaries; an exception is Saturn's moon Hyperion, which rotates chaotically due to a variety of external influences. No moons have moons of their own; the tidal effects of their primaries make orbits around them unstable. However, several moons have companions in their Lagrangian points (eg, Saturn's moons Tethys and Dione).
The recent discovery of Ida's moon Dactyl confirms that some asteroids also have moons.
The largest moons in the solar system (those bigger than about 3000 km across) are Earth's Moon, Jupiter's Galilean moons Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto, Saturn's moon Titan, and Neptune's captured moon Triton. For smaller moons see the appropriate planets.
A comparative table classifying the moons of the solar system by diameter, also including a column for some notable asteroids:
| Diameter(km) | Earth | Mars | Asteroids | Jupiter | Saturn | Uranus | Neptune | Pluto |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5000+ | Ganymede | Titan | ||||||
| 4000-5000 | Callisto | |||||||
| 3000-4000 | Luna | Europa Io | ||||||
| 2000-3000 | Triton | |||||||
| 1000-2000 | 1 Ceres | Iapetus Rhea Dione Tethys | Ariel Umbriel Titania Oberon | Charon | ||||
| 500-1000 | 4 Vesta 2 Pallas | |||||||
| 100-500 | (Too many to list) | Amalthea | Phoebe Hyperion Enceladus Mimas Janus Epimetheus | Sycorax Miranda Puck Portia | Proteus Nereid Larissa Galatea Despina | |||
| 50-100 | (Too many to list) | Himalia Thebe | Pandora Prometheus | Setebos Prospero Stephano Caliban1986U10 Belinda Rosalind Juliet Desdemona Cressida Bianca Cordelia Ophelia | Thalassa Naiad | |||
| 10-50 | Phobos Deimos | (Too many to list) | Sinope Pasiphae Carme Ananke Elara Lysithea Leda Adrastea Metis | Helene Calypso Telesto Atlas Pan | Trinculo | |||
| less than 10 | Cruithne¹ | S/2000 J11S/2000 J1IocastePraxidikeHarpalykeIsonoeErinomeTaygeteChaldeneS/2002 J1KalykeMegacliteCallirrhoeEuporieKaleOrthosieThyoneEuantheHermippePasitheeEurydomeAitneSpondeAutonoeS/2001 J11S/2003 J2S/2003 J3S/2003 J4S/2003 J5S/2003 J6S/2003 J7S/2003 J8S/2003 J9S/2003 J10S/2003 J11S/2003 J12S/2003 J13S/2003 J14S/2003 J15S/2003 J16S/2003 J17S/2003 J18S/2003 J19S/2003 J20S/2003 J21 | ||||||
| unknown | Themisto | YmirPaaliaqSiarnaqTarvosKiviuqIjiraqThrymSkadiMundilfariErriapoAlbiorixSuttungS/2003 S1 | S/2002 N1S/2002 N2S/2002 N3 |
¹ It is debatable whether Cruithne counts as a real moon; it is mainly placed here for comparison's sake.
External links
Jupiter's moons
- Data on Jupiter's satellites
- Jupiter's new moons (discovered in 2000)
- Jupiter's new moons (discovered in 2002)
- Jupiter's new moons (discovered in 2003)
Saturn's moons
Neptune's moons
Solar system:
Sun - Mercury - Venus - Earth - Mars - Asteroids - Jupiter - Saturn - Uranus - Neptune - Pluto - Comets