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Is This Moon Three?

tetrad writes "The BBC reports that a new object has been discovered orbiting Earth. It's possible that it's just a piece of space junk, but more likely it is a rock that has been recently (in the last year) captured by our planet's gravitational field. If the object is confirmed to be natural, this would be Earth's third moon. (Did you know there were two already?)" Here's our earlier mention of Earth's alleged second moon. Update: 09/12 04:52 GMT by T : Reader cscx adds a link to an article running on space.com which says this newfound object may be some trash from the Apollo missions.

5 of 313 comments (clear)

  1. Maybe an old Apollo booster? by ishmalius · · Score: 4, Informative
    Here is a link I saw just before your posting:

    Space.com

  2. Re:What's in a moon? by NetFu · · Score: 4, Informative
    New Page 1

    Well, here's what Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary says:

    Moon:
    -- 1a : a natural satellite of a planet

    Satellite:
    -- 2a : a celestial body orbiting another of larger size

    I think based on these common definitions that these objects, assuming they are found be natural and that they can be proved to orbit Earth, should be called moons. Maybe they don't fit our cultural, unwritten definition of a Moon, but that doesn't change the facts. So, maybe we need to change what most people think of as the Moon...

  3. Ephemeris information for the object by xlation · · Score: 5, Informative
    The JPL has an ephemeris generator that now calculates the position of the object.
    To see the data:
    1. Click the "Target Body" Button
    2. Choose "Spacecraft" from the "Select Major Body" dropdown.
    3. Select "J002E3 Spacecraft (UNCONFIRMED)"
  4. The 60-degree angle, moons, and whatnot by devphil · · Score: 5, Informative
    If you ever study the 'Trojans', you know that there are huge bodies of apparent moonlets that sit on a sixty-degree angle from Jupiter's, directly along Jupiter's orbit from the sun. (They are apparently held in such a strange place by the gravity of Jupiter vs. the gravity of Sol.)

    Anytime you have something (Foo) orbiting something else (Bar), i.e., once the requirements of "orbit" are met, there are five points of gravitational equilibrium set up amongst the two bodies. They're called LaGrange points. The last two, L4 and L5, are on Foo's orbit around Bar, sixty degrees ahead of Foo (L4) and sixty degrees behind (L5).

    L4 and L5 by themselves, ignoring L1-L3, are often called Trojan points, named for this particular group of satellites.

    As for the defintion of moon versus just another satellite in general, I believe it has to do with respective mass ratios, and where the fulcrum point of rotation is between the two bodies. Right now our own moon isn't in a true rotation around us, we're in a sort of dumbbell tumble, and the center of the dumbbell is a bit below the ground.

    (Actual astronomers please correct me, I'm on a number of narcotic-containing painkillers right now and could have gotten some words tumbled.)

    --
    You cannot apply a technological solution to a sociological problem. (Edwards' Law)
  5. Re:What's in a moon? by Autonomous+Crowhard · · Score: 5, Informative
    The best explanation I've ever heard of if a two body system is a planet-moon or two-planet combination is this:


    If the center of gravity of two bodies lies inside one of the bodies then that is the planet and the other is the moon. If the center of gravity is between the two objects then it is a two planet system.