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Neptune’s strange new moon is first found in a decade

A surprise lurking in old Hubble pictures, the small rock raises questions about how it survived the chaos thought to have created Neptune's other moons
Hubble's composite picture of blue-hued Neptune, its rings and five of its 14 known moons
Hubble鈥檚 composite picture of blue-hued Neptune, its rings and five of its 14 known moons
(Image: NASA/ESA/M. Showalter/SETI Institute)

Neptune has a new moon, and its existence is an enigma. The object, known for now as S/2004 N1, is the first Neptunian moon to be found in a decade. Its diminutive size raises questions as to how it survived the chaos thought to have created the giant planet鈥檚 other moons.

The faint moon was discovered in archived images from the Hubble Space Telescope. of the SETI Institute in Mountain View, California, was poring over pictures of Neptune taken in 2009 to study segments of its rings.

The rings around our outermost planet are too faint to see without taking very long-exposure pictures. However, the rings orbit so fast that taking one long shot would smear them across the frame. Showalter and colleagues gathered multiple shorter-exposure images and developed a technique to digitally rewind the orbits to the same point in time. Then they could stack several images on top of each other to reveal details of the rings.

鈥淚 got nice pictures of the arcs, which was my main purpose, but I also got this little extra dot that I was not expecting to see,鈥 says Showalter.

Stacking eight to 10 images together allowed the moon to show up plain as day, he says. When he went back and repeated the process using Hubble pictures taken in 2004, the moon was still there and moving as expected.

Daughters of Triton

The tiny addition to Neptune鈥檚 family is an added shock because it seems too small to have survived the formation of the other moons, according to accepted theories.

Neptune鈥檚 biggest moon, Triton, is 2705 kilometres wide and orbits backwards 鈥 travelling in the opposite direction to the planet鈥檚 spin. Its large size and wonky orbit led astronomers to believe that Triton was captured by Neptune鈥檚 gravity about 4 billion years ago and that it destroyed whatever moons the gas giant originally had as it was settling into its new home.

鈥淭he Neptune moons we see today were probably broken up and regenerated after the arrival of Triton,鈥 says Showalter.

S/2004 N1 is about 20 kilometres across, and it has a nearly circular orbit that takes it around Neptune in 23 hours. Its orbit is squarely between Proteus, the outermost moon aside from Triton, and Larissa. These moons are 400 and 200 kilometres across, respectively. But in the post-Triton chaos, such a small rock should have been swept up to become part of Proteus, or broken up by interloping asteroids sometime after the system settled down.

鈥淗ow you can have a 20-kilometre object around Neptune is a little bit of a puzzle,鈥 says Showalter. 鈥淚t鈥檚 far enough away that its orbit is stable. Once you put it there it will stay there. The question is, how did it get there?鈥

Name game

A more immediate question may be what to call this new and unusual moon. Neptune鈥檚 other natural satellites are named after minor water deities in Greek and Roman mythology, an official naming convention set up by the International Astronomical Union (IAU). Showalter and colleagues also recently discovered two new moons around Pluto and put their names to a public vote 鈥 although the IAU had the final say.

鈥淐ompared to work we recently did naming the moons of Pluto, there鈥檚 not quite as colourful a cast of characters to work with, but there is still an interesting list of sea creatures one can choose from,鈥 he says.

For now, Showalter and the discovery team do not have a favourite in mind: 鈥淲e don鈥檛 really have a name for it. It鈥檚 just 鈥榯hat little moon鈥, because S/2004 N1 does not roll off the tongue.鈥

Topics: Pluto / Solar system