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Hubble comes through again! Just when you thought the space telescope was a gonner....

Analog

Lifer
The Hubble Space Telescope has spotted two possible new moons around Pluto, the ninth planet in the Solar System.

If confirmed, it would bring Pluto's tally of satellites to three; Charon, the only known moon of Pluto, was discovered by astronomers in 1978.

Confirmation of two new moons would shed light on the evolution of the Kuiper Belt, the vast region containing icy objects beyond Neptune's orbit.

All the candidate moons seem to orbit Pluto in an anti-clockwise direction.

The candidate moons, given the provisional names S/2005 P1 and S/2005 P2, are between 45 and 160km (30 and 100 miles). By comparison, Charon's diameter is about 1,200 km.

Observations suggest they orbit Pluto at at least twice the distance Charon does. P2 stays about 49,000km from the planet, P1 lies even further away at 65,000km.

Fainter objects

Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys instrument observed the two new candidate moons on 15 May.

"The new satellite candidates are roughly 5,000 times fainter than Pluto, but they really stood out in these Hubble images," said Max Mutchler of the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, and the first team member to identify the satellites.

Artist's impression of the Pluto system, Nasa/Space Telescope Science Institute
Pluto resides beyond Neptune in the region known as the Kuiper Belt
Three days later, Hubble looked at Pluto again. The two objects were still there and appeared to be moving in orbit around Pluto.

"A re-examination of Hubble images taken on 14 June 2002 has essentially confirmed the presence of both P1 and P2 near the predicted locations based on the 2005 Hubble observations," added Marc Buie of the Lowell Observatory, in Flagstaff, Arizona, another member of the team.

The discovery would make Pluto the first Kuiper Belt object known to have more than one satellite.

The team behind the discovery plans to make follow-up observations in February to confirm the objects really are new moons of Pluto.

Only then can the International Astronomical Union, consider names for the candidate satellites.

The researchers also looked for other potential moons around Pluto.

"These Hubble images represent the most sensitive search yet for objects around Pluto,"

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4396546.stm
 
Originally posted by: spidey07
It took 15 years to find a moon in our solar system?

strange.

interesting news however.

These moons are 30 and 100 miles in dia. Not very big!
 
Originally posted by: spidey07
It took 15 years to find a moon in our solar system?

strange.

interesting news however.

We just found another 'planet' in the system that's larger than pluto.

It's difficult because unlike stars, planets don't give off their own light.
 
Originally posted by: archcommus
I thought they already officially decided Pluto wasn't a planet?


There are not rules stated on what is a planet and what is not a planet.

If everything stays the same, the 10th planet will be Xena with its moon Gabrielle.
 
Originally posted by: Jnetty99
Originally posted by: archcommus
I thought they already officially decided Pluto wasn't a planet?


There are not rules stated on what is a planet and what is not a planet.

If everything stays the same, the 10th planet will be Xena with its moon Gabrielle.

i thought that was quoaoar or some such?

meh

who cares, theyre essentially big rocks we can barely see, nevermind decide on what status to give them
 
Are you guys serious that they're actually naming the tenth planet Xena and Gaberille? I thought that was a joke...

and yeah, its kinda hard to see 30 mile objects over 2 billion miles away
 
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