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Moons of Jupiter

There are 95 moons of Jupiter with confirmed orbits as of 23 March 2023.[1][note 1] This number does not include a number of meter-sized moonlets thought to be shed from the inner moons, nor hundreds of possible kilometer-sized outer irregular moons that were only briefly captured by telescopes.[4] All together, Jupiter's moons form a satellite system called the Jovian system. The most massive of the moons are the four Galilean moons: Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto, which were independently discovered in 1610 by Galileo Galilei and Simon Marius and were the first objects found to orbit a body that was neither Earth nor the Sun. Much more recently, beginning in 1892, dozens of far smaller Jovian moons have been detected and have received the names of lovers (or other sexual partners) or daughters of the Roman god Jupiter or his Greek equivalent Zeus. The Galilean moons are by far the largest and most massive objects to orbit Jupiter, with the remaining 91 known moons and the rings together composing just 0.003% of the total orbiting mass.

A montage of Jupiter and its four largest moons (distance and sizes not to scale)

Of Jupiter's moons, eight are regular satellites with prograde and nearly circular orbits that are not greatly inclined with respect to Jupiter's equatorial plane. The Galilean satellites are nearly spherical in shape due to their planetary mass, and are just massive enough that they would be considered major planets if they were in direct orbit around the Sun. The other four regular satellites, known as the inner moons, are much smaller and closer to Jupiter; these serve as sources of the dust that makes up Jupiter's rings. The remainder of Jupiter's moons are outer irregular satellites whose prograde and retrograde orbits are much farther from Jupiter and have high inclinations and eccentricities. The largest of these moons were likely asteroids that were captured from solar orbits by Jupiter before impacts with other small bodies shattered them into many kilometer-sized fragments, forming collisional families of moons sharing similar orbits. Jupiter is expected to have about 100 irregular moons larger than 1 km (0.6 mi) in diameter, plus around 500 more smaller retrograde moons down to diameters of 0.8 km (0.5 mi).[5] Of the 87 known irregular moons of Jupiter, 38 of them have not yet been officially named.

Characteristics Edit

 
The Galilean moons. From left to right, in order of increasing distance from Jupiter: Io; Europa; Ganymede; Callisto.

The physical and orbital characteristics of the moons vary widely. The four Galileans are all over 3,100 kilometres (1,900 mi) in diameter; the largest Galilean, Ganymede, is the ninth largest object in the Solar System, after the Sun and seven of the planets, Ganymede being larger than Mercury. All other Jovian moons are less than 250 kilometres (160 mi) in diameter, with most barely exceeding 5 kilometres (3.1 mi).[note 2] Their orbital shapes range from nearly perfectly circular to highly eccentric and inclined, and many revolve in the direction opposite to Jupiter's rotation (retrograde motion). Orbital periods range from seven hours (taking less time than Jupiter does to rotate around its axis), to almost three Earth years.

Origin and evolution Edit

 
The relative masses of the Jovian moons. Those smaller than Europa are not visible at this scale, and combined would only be visible at 100× magnification.

Jupiter's regular satellites are believed to have formed from a circumplanetary disk, a ring of accreting gas and solid debris analogous to a protoplanetary disk.[6][7] They may be the remnants of a score of Galilean-mass satellites that formed early in Jupiter's history.[6][8]

Simulations suggest that, while the disk had a relatively high mass at any given moment, over time a substantial fraction (several tens of a percent) of the mass of Jupiter captured from the solar nebula was passed through it. However, only 2% of the proto-disk mass of Jupiter is required to explain the existing satellites.[6] Thus, several generations of Galilean-mass satellites may have been in Jupiter's early history. Each generation of moons might have spiraled into Jupiter, because of drag from the disk, with new moons then forming from the new debris captured from the solar nebula.[6] By the time the present (possibly fifth) generation formed, the disk had thinned so that it no longer greatly interfered with the moons' orbits.[8] The current Galilean moons were still affected, falling into and being partially protected by an orbital resonance with each other, which still exists for Io, Europa, and Ganymede: they are in a 1:2:4 resonance. Ganymede's larger mass means that it would have migrated inward at a faster rate than Europa or Io.[6] Tidal dissipation in the Jovian system is still ongoing and Callisto will likely be captured into the resonance in about 1.5 billion years, creating a 1:2:4:8 chain.[9]

The outer, irregular moons are thought to have originated from captured asteroids, whereas the protolunar disk was still massive enough to absorb much of their momentum and thus capture them into orbit. Many are believed to have been broken up by mechanical stresses during capture, or afterward by collisions with other small bodies, producing the moons we see today.[10]

History and discovery Edit

Visual observations Edit

 
Jupiter and the Galilean moons as seen through a 25 cm (10 in) Meade LX200 telescope

Chinese historian Xi Zezong claimed that the earliest record of a Jovian moon (Ganymede or Callisto) was a note by Chinese astronomer Gan De of an observation around 364 BC regarding a "reddish star".[11] However, the first certain observations of Jupiter's satellites were those of Galileo Galilei in 1609.[12] By January 1610, he had sighted the four massive Galilean moons with his 20× magnification telescope, and he published his results in March 1610.[13]

Simon Marius had independently discovered the moons one day after Galileo, although he did not publish his book on the subject until 1614. Even so, the names Marius assigned are used today: Ganymede, Callisto, Io, and Europa.[14] No additional satellites were discovered until E. E. Barnard observed Amalthea in 1892.[15]

Photographic and spacecraft observations Edit

 
Voyager 1 discovery image of the inner moon Metis on 4 March 1979, showing the moon's tiny silhouette against the backdrop of Jupiter's clouds

With the aid of telescopic photography with photographic plates, further discoveries followed quickly over the course of the 20th century. Himalia was discovered in 1904,[16] Elara in 1905,[17] Pasiphae in 1908,[18] Sinope in 1914,[19] Lysithea and Carme in 1938,[20] Ananke in 1951,[21] and Leda in 1974.[22]

By the time that the Voyager space probes reached Jupiter, around 1979, thirteen moons had been discovered, not including Themisto, which had been observed in 1975,[23] but was lost until 2000 due to insufficient initial observation data. The Voyager spacecraft discovered an additional three inner moons in 1979: Metis, Adrastea, and Thebe.[24]

Digital telescopic observations Edit

No additional moons were discovered until two decades later, with the fortuitous discovery of Callirrhoe by the Spacewatch survey in October 1999.[25] During the 1990s, photographic plates phased out as digital charge-coupled device (CCD) cameras began emerging in telescopes on Earth, allowing for wide-field surveys of the sky at unprecedented sensitivities and ushering in a wave of new moon discoveries.[26] Scott Sheppard, then a graduate student of David Jewitt, demonstrated this extended capability of CCD cameras in a survey conducted with the Mauna Kea Observatory's 2.2-meter (88 in) UH88 telescope in November 2000, discovering eleven new irregular moons of Jupiter including the previously lost Themisto with the aid of automated computer algorithms.[27]

From 2001 onward, Sheppard and Jewitt alongside other collaborators continued surveying for Jovian irregular moons with the 3.6-meter (12 ft) Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT), discovering an additional eleven in December 2001, one in October 2002, and nineteen in February 2003.[27][1] At the same time, another independent team led by Brett J. Gladman also used the CFHT in 2003 to search for Jovian irregular moons, discovering four and co-discovering two with Sheppard.[1][28][29] From the start to end of these CCD-based surveys in 2000–2004, Jupiter's known moon count had grown from 17 to 63.[25][28] All of these moons discovered after 2000 are faint and tiny, with apparent magnitudes between 22–23 and diameters less than 10 km (6.2 mi).[27] As a result, many could not be reliably tracked and ended up becoming lost.[30]

Beginning in 2009, a team of astronomers, namely Mike Alexandersen, Marina Brozović, Brett Gladman, Robert Jacobson, and Christian Veillet, began a campaign to recover Jupiter's lost irregular moons using the CFHT and Palomar Observatory's 5.1-meter (17 ft) Hale Telescope.[31][30] They discovered two previously unknown Jovian irregular moons during recovery efforts in September 2010, prompting further follow-up observations to confirm these by 2011.[31][32] One of these moons, S/2010 J 2 (now Jupiter LII), has an apparent magnitude of 24 and a diameter of only 1–2 km (0.62–1.2 mi), making it one of the faintest and smallest confirmed moons of Jupiter even as of 2023.[33][4] Meanwhile, in September 2011, Scott Sheppard, now a faculty member of the Carnegie Institution for Science,[4] discovered two more irregular moons using the institution's 6.5-meter (21 ft) Magellan Telescopes at Las Campanas Observatory, raising Jupiter's known moon count to 67.[34] Although Sheppard's two moons were followed up and confirmed by 2012, both became lost due to insufficient observational coverage.[30][35]

In 2016, while surveying for distant trans-Neptunian objects with the Magellan Telescopes, Sheppard serendipitously observed a region of the sky located near Jupiter, enticing him to search for Jovian irregular moons as a detour. In collaboration with Chadwick Trujillo and David Tholen, Sheppard continued surveying around Jupiter from 2016 to 2018 using the Cerro Tololo Observatory's 4.0-meter (13 ft) Víctor M. Blanco Telescope and Mauna Kea Observatory's 8.2-meter (27 ft) Subaru Telescope.[36][37] In the process, Sheppard's team recovered several lost moons of Jupiter from 2003 to 2011 and reported two new Jovian irregular moons in June 2017.[38] Then in July 2018, Sheppard's team announced ten more irregular moons confirmed from 2016 to 2018 observations, bringing Jupiter's known moon count to 79. Among these was Valetudo, which has an unusually distant prograde orbit that crosses paths with the retrograde irregular moons.[36][37] Several more unidentified Jovian irregular satellites were detected in Sheppard's 2016–2018 search, but were too faint for follow-up confirmation.[37][39]: 10 

From November 2021 to January 2023, Sheppard discovered twelve more irregular moons of Jupiter and confirmed them in archival survey imagery from 2003 to 2018, bringing the total count to 92.[40][2][3] Among these was S/2018 J 4, a highly-inclined prograde moon that is now known to be in same orbital grouping as the moon Carpo, which was previously thought to be solitary.[3] On 22 February 2023, Sheppard announced three more moons discovered in a 2022 survey, now bringing Jupiter's total known moon count to 95.[2] In a February 2023 interview with NPR, Sheppard noted that he and his team are currently tracking even more moons of Jupiter, which should place Jupiter's moon count over 100 once confirmed over the next two years.[41]

Many more irregular moons of Jupiter will inevitably be discovered in the future, especially after the beginning of deep sky surveys by the upcoming Vera C. Rubin Observatory and Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope in the mid-2020s.[42][43] The Rubin Observatory's 8.4-meter (28 ft) aperture telescope and 3.5 square-degree field of view will probe Jupiter's irregular moons down to diameters of 1 km (0.6 mi)[10]: 265  at apparent magnitudes of 24.5, with the potential of increasing the known population by up to tenfold.[42]: 292  Likewise, the Roman Space Telescope's 2.4-meter (7.9 ft) aperture and 0.28 square-degree field of view will probe Jupiter's irregular moons down to diameters of 0.3 km (0.2 mi) at magnitude 27.7, with the potential of discovering approximately 1,000 Jovian moons above this size.[43]: 24  Discovering these many irregular satellites will help reveal their population's size distribution and collisional histories, which will place further constraints to how the Solar System formed.[43]: 24–25 

Discovery of Outer Planet Moons

Naming Edit

 
Galilean moons around Jupiter   Jupiter ·   Io ·   Europa ·   Ganymede ·   Callisto
 
Orbits of Jupiter's inner moons within its rings

The Galilean moons of Jupiter (Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto) were named by Simon Marius soon after their discovery in 1610.[44] However, these names fell out of favor until the 20th century. The astronomical literature instead simply referred to "Jupiter I", "Jupiter II", etc., or "the first satellite of Jupiter", "Jupiter's second satellite", and so on.[44] The names Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto became popular in the mid-20th century,[45] whereas the rest of the moons remained unnamed and were usually numbered in Roman numerals V (5) to XII (12).[46][47] Jupiter V was discovered in 1892 and given the name Amalthea by a popular though unofficial convention, a name first used by French astronomer Camille Flammarion.[48][49]

The other moons were simply labeled by their Roman numeral (e.g. Jupiter IX) in the majority of astronomical literature until the 1970s.[50] Several different suggestions were made for names of Jupiter's outer satellites, but none were universally accepted until 1975 when the International Astronomical Union's (IAU) Task Group for Outer Solar System Nomenclature granted names to satellites V–XIII,[51] and provided for a formal naming process for future satellites still to be discovered.[51] The practice was to name newly discovered moons of Jupiter after lovers and favorites of the god Jupiter (Zeus) and, since 2004, also after their descendants.[48] All of Jupiter's satellites from XXXIV (Euporie) onward are named after descendants of Jupiter or Zeus,[48] except LIII (Dia), named after a lover of Jupiter. Names ending with "a" or "o" are used for prograde irregular satellites (the latter for highly inclined satellites), and names ending with "e" are used for retrograde irregulars.[26] With the discovery of smaller, kilometre-sized moons around Jupiter, the IAU has established an additional convention to limit the naming of small moons with absolute magnitudes greater than 18 or diameters smaller than 1 km (0.6 mi).[52] Some of the most recently confirmed moons have not received names.[4]

Some asteroids share the same names as moons of Jupiter: 9 Metis, 38 Leda, 52 Europa, 85 Io, 113 Amalthea, 239 Adrastea. Two more asteroids previously shared the names of Jovian moons until spelling differences were made permanent by the IAU: Ganymede and asteroid 1036 Ganymed; and Callisto and asteroid 204 Kallisto.

Groups Edit

Regular satellites Edit

These have prograde and nearly circular orbits of low inclination and are split into two groups:

  • Inner satellites or Amalthea group: Metis, Adrastea, Amalthea, and Thebe. These orbit very close to Jupiter; the innermost two orbit in less than a Jovian day. The latter two are respectively the fifth and seventh largest moons in the Jovian system. Observations suggest that at least the largest member, Amalthea, did not form on its present orbit, but farther from the planet, or that it is a captured Solar System body.[53] These moons, along with a number of seen and as-yet-unseen inner moonlets (see Amalthea moonlets), replenish and maintain Jupiter's faint ring system. Metis and Adrastea help to maintain Jupiter's main ring, whereas Amalthea and Thebe each maintain their own faint outer rings.[54][55]
  • Main group or Galilean moons: Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto. They are some of the largest objects in the Solar System outside the Sun and the eight planets in terms of mass, larger than any known dwarf planet. Ganymede exceeds (and Callisto nearly equals) even the planet Mercury in diameter, though they are less massive. They are respectively the fourth-, sixth-, first-, and third-largest natural satellites in the Solar System, containing approximately 99.997% of the total mass in orbit around Jupiter, while Jupiter is almost 5,000 times more massive than the Galilean moons.[note 3] The inner moons are in a 1:2:4 orbital resonance. Models suggest that they formed by slow accretion in the low-density Jovian subnebula—a disc of the gas and dust that existed around Jupiter after its formation—which lasted up to 10 million years in the case of Callisto.[56] Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto are suspected of having subsurface water oceans,[57][58] and Io may have a subsurface magma ocean.[59]

Irregular satellites Edit

 
Orbits and positions of Jupiter's irregular satellites as of 1 January 2021. Prograde orbits are colored blue while retrograde orbits are colored red.

The irregular satellites are substantially smaller objects with more distant and eccentric orbits. They form families with shared similarities in orbit (semi-major axis, inclination, eccentricity) and composition; it is believed that these are at least partially collisional families that were created when larger (but still small) parent bodies were shattered by impacts from asteroids captured by Jupiter's gravitational field. These families bear the names of their largest members. The identification of satellite families is tentative, but the following are typically listed:[4][60][61]

  • Prograde satellites:
    • Themisto is the innermost irregular moon and is not part of a known family.[4][60]
    • The Himalia group is confined within semi-major axes between 11–12 million km (6.8–7.5 million mi), inclinations between 27–29°, and eccentricities between 0.12 and 0.21.[62] It has been suggested that the group could be a remnant of the break-up of an asteroid from the asteroid belt.[60]
    • The Carpo group includes two known moons on very high orbital inclinations of 50° and semi-major axes between 16–17 million km (9.9–10.6 million mi).[4] Due to their exceptionally high inclinations, the moons of the Carpo group are subject to gravitational perturbations that induce the Lidov–Kozai resonance in their orbits, which cause their eccentricities and inclinations to periodically oscillate in correspondence with each other.[35] The Lidov–Kozai resonance can significantly alter the orbits of these moons: for example, the eccentricity and inclination of the group's namesake Carpo can fluctuate between 0.19–0.69 and 44–59°, respectively.[35]
    • Valetudo is the outermost prograde moon and is not part of a known family. Its prograde orbit crosses paths with several moons that have retrograde orbits and may in the future collide with them.[37]
  • Retrograde satellites:
    • The Carme group is tightly confined within semi-major axes between 22–24 million km (14–15 million mi), inclinations between 164–166°, and eccentricities between 0.25 and 0.28.[62] It is very homogeneous in color (light red) and is believed to have originated as collisional fragments from a D-type asteroid progenitor, possibly a Jupiter trojan.[27]
    • The Ananke group has a relatively wider spread than the previous groups, with semi-major axes between 19–22 million km (12–14 million mi), inclinations between 144–156°, and eccentricities between 0.09 and 0.25.[62] Most of the members appear gray, and are believed to have formed from the breakup of a captured asteroid.[27]
    • The Pasiphae group is quite dispersed, with semi-major axes spread over 22–25 million km (14–16 million mi), inclinations between 141° and 157°, and higher eccentricities between 0.23 and 0.44.[62] The colors also vary significantly, from red to grey, which might be the result of multiple collisions. Sinope, sometimes included in the Pasiphae group,[27] is red and, given the difference in inclination, it could have been captured independently;[60] Pasiphae and Sinope are also trapped in secular resonances with Jupiter.[63]

Based on their survey discoveries in 2000–2003, Sheppard and Jewitt predicted that Jupiter should have approximately 100 irregular satellites larger than 1 km (0.6 mi) in diameter, or brighter than magnitude 24.[27]: 262  Survey observations by Alexandersen et al. in 2010–2011 agreed with this prediction, estimating that approximately 40 Jovian irregular satellites of this size remained undiscovered in 2012.[31]: 4 

In September 2020, researchers from the University of British Columbia identified 45 candidate irregular moons from an analysis of archival images taken in 2010 by the CFHT.[64] These candidates were mainly small and faint, down to magnitude of 25.7 or above 0.8 km (0.5 mi) in diameter. From the number of candidate moons detected within a sky area of one square degree, the team extrapolated that the population of retrograde Jovian moons brighter than magnitude 25.7 is around 600+600
−300
within a factor of 2.[5]: 6  Although the team considers their characterized candidates to be likely moons of Jupiter, they all remain unconfirmed due to insufficient observation data for determining reliable orbits.[64] The true population of Jovian irregular moons is likely complete down to magnitude 23.2 at diameters over 3 km (1.9 mi) as of 2020.[5]: 6 [31]: 4 

List Edit

 
Orbital diagram of the orbital inclination and orbital distances for Jupiter's rings and moon system at various scales. Notable moons, moon groups, and rings are individually labeled. Open the image for full resolution.

The moons of Jupiter are listed below by orbital period. Moons massive enough for their surfaces to have collapsed into a spheroid are highlighted in bold. These are the four Galilean moons, which are comparable in size to the Moon. The other moons are much smaller, with the least massive Galilean moon being more than 7,000 times more massive than the most massive of the other moons. The irregular captured moons are shaded light gray and orange when prograde and yellow, red, and dark gray when retrograde.

The orbits and mean distances of the irregular moons are highly variable over short timescales due to frequent planetary and solar perturbations,[35] so proper orbital elements which are averaged over a period of time are preferably used. The proper orbital elements of the irregular moons listed here are averaged over a 400-year numerical integration by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory: for the above reasons, they may strongly differ from osculating orbital elements provided by other sources.[62] Otherwise, recently-discovered irregular moons without published proper elements are temporarily listed here with inaccurate osculating orbital elements that are italicized to distinguish them from other irregular moons with proper orbital elements. Some of the irregular moons' proper orbital periods in this list may not scale accordingly with their proper semi-major axes due to the aforementioned perturbations. The irregular moons' proper orbital elements are all based on the reference epoch of 1 January 2000.[62]

Some irregular moons have only been observed briefly for a year or two, but their orbits are known accurately enough that they will not be lost to positional uncertainties.[35][4] As of February 2023, only three known moons of Jupiter—S/2022 J 1, S/2022 J 2, and S/2022 J 3—have observation arcs shorter than one year and are therefore at risk of becoming lost.[4]

Key
 
Inner moons

Galilean moons

Themisto group

Himalia group
§
Carpo group
±
Valetudo group

Ananke group

Carme group

Pasiphae group
Label
[note 4]
Name
Pronunciation Image Abs.
magn.
[65]
Diameter (km)[4][note 5] Mass
(×1016 kg)[66][note 6]
Semi-major axis
(km)[62]
Orbital period (d)
[62][note 7]
Inclination
(°)[62]
Eccentricity
[4]
Discovery
year
[1]
Year announced Discoverer[48][1] Group
[note 8]
XVI Metis /ˈmtəs/
 
10.5 43
(60 × 40 × 34)
≈ 3.6 128000 +0.2948
(+7h 04m 29s)
0.060 0.0002 1979 1980 Synnott
(Voyager 1)
Inner
XV Adrastea /ædrəˈstə/
 
12.0 16.4
(20 × 16 × 14)
≈ 0.20 129000 +0.2983
(+7h 09m 30s)
0.030 0.0015 1979 1979 Jewitt
(Voyager 2)
Inner
V Amalthea /æməlˈθə/[67]
 
7.1 167
(250 × 146 × 128)
208 181400 +0.4999
(+11h 59m 53s)
0.374 0.0032 1892 1892 Barnard Inner
XIV Thebe /ˈθb/
 
9.0 98.6
(116 × 98 × 84)
≈ 43 221900 +0.6761
(+16h 13m 35s)
1.076 0.0175 1979 1980 Synnott
(Voyager 1)
Inner
I Io /ˈ/
 
-1.7 3643.2
(3660 × 3637 × 3631)
8931900 421800 +1.7627
(+1d 18h 18m 20s)
0.050[68] 0.0041 1610 1610 Galileo Galilean
II Europa /jʊəˈrpə/[69]
 
-1.4 3121.6 4799800 671100 +3.5255
(+3d 12h 36m 40s)
0.470[68] 0.0090 1610 1610 Galileo Galilean
III Ganymede /ˈɡænəmd/[70][71]
 
-2.1 5268.2 14819000 1070400 +7.1556 0.200[68] 0.0013 1610 1610 Galileo Galilean
IV Callisto /kəˈlɪst/
 
-1.2 4820.6 10759000 1882700 +16.690 0.192[68] 0.0074 1610 1610 Galileo Galilean
XVIII Themisto /θəˈmɪst/
 
13.3 ≈ 9 ≈ 0.038 7398500 +130.03 43.8 0.340 1975/2000 1975 Kowal & Roemer/
Sheppard et al.
Themisto
XIII Leda /ˈldə/
 
12.7 21.5 ≈ 0.52 11146400 +240.93 28.6 0.162 1974 1974 Kowal Himalia
LXXI Ersa /ˈɜːrsə/
 
16.0 ≈ 3 ≈ 0.0014 11401000 +249.23 29.1 0.116 2018 2018 Sheppard Himalia
  S/2018 J 2 16.5 ≈ 3 ≈ 0.0014 11419700 +249.92 28.3 0.152 2018 2022 Sheppard Himalia
VI Himalia /hɪˈmliə/
 
8.0 139.6
(150 × 120)
420 11440600 +250.56 28.1 0.160 1904 1905 Perrine Himalia
LXV Pandia /pænˈdə/
 
16.2 ≈ 3 ≈ 0.0014 11481000 +251.91 29.0 0.179 2017 2018 Sheppard Himalia
X Lysithea /lˈsɪθiə/
 
11.2 42.2 ≈ 3.9 11700800 +259.20 27.2 0.117 1938 1938 Nicholson Himalia
VII Elara /ˈɛlərə/
 
9.7 79.9 ≈ 27 11712300 +259.64 27.9 0.211 1905 1905 Perrine Himalia
  S/2011 J 3 16.3 ≈ 3 ≈ 0.0014 11716800 +259.84 27.6 0.192 2011 2022 Sheppard Himalia
LIII Dia /ˈdə/
 
16.1 ≈ 4 ≈ 0.0034 12260300 +278.21 29.0 0.232 2000 2001 Sheppard et al. Himalia
  S/2018 J 4§ 16.7 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 16328500 +427.63 50.2 0.177 2018 2023 Sheppard Carpo
XLVI Carpo§ /ˈkɑːrp/
 
16.2 ≈ 3 ≈ 0.0014 17042300 +456.29 53.2 0.416 2003 2003 Sheppard Carpo
LXII Valetudo± /væləˈtjd/
 
17.0 ≈ 1 ≈ 0.000052 18694200 +527.61 34.5 0.217 2016 2018 Sheppard Valetudo
XXXIV Euporie /ˈjpər/
 
16.3 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 19265800 −550.69 145.7 0.148 2001 2002 Sheppard et al. Ananke
LV S/2003 J 18
 
16.4 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 20336300 −598.12 145.3 0.090 2003 2003 Gladman Ananke
LX Eupheme /jˈfm/
 
16.6 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 20768600 −617.73 148.0 0.241 2003 2003 Sheppard Ananke
  S/2021 J 3 17.2 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 20776700 −618.33 147.9 0.239 2021 2023 Sheppard Ananke
LII S/2010 J 2
 
17.4 ≈ 1 ≈ 0.000052 20793000 −618.84 148.1 0.248 2010 2011 Veillet Ananke
LIV S/2016 J 1
 
17.0 ≈ 1 ≈ 0.000052 20802600 −618.49 144.7 0.232 2016 2017 Sheppard Ananke
XL Mneme /ˈnm/
 
16.3 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 20821000 −620.07 148.0 0.247 2003 2003 Sheppard & Gladman Ananke
XXXIII Euanthe /jˈænθ/
 
16.4 ≈ 3 ≈ 0.0014 20827000 −620.44 148.0 0.239 2001 2002 Sheppard et al. Ananke
  S/2003 J 16
 
16.3 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 20882600 −622.88 148.0 0.243 2003 2003 Gladman Ananke
XXII Harpalyke /hɑːrˈpælək/
 
15.9 ≈ 4 ≈ 0.0034 20892100 −623.32 147.7 0.232 2000 2001 Sheppard et al. Ananke
XXXV Orthosie /ɔːrˈθz/
 
16.6 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 20901000 −622.59 144.3 0.299 2001 2002 Sheppard et al. Ananke
XLV Helike /ˈhɛlək/
 
16.0 ≈ 4 ≈ 0.0034 20915700 −626.33 154.4 0.153 2003 2003 Sheppard Ananke
  S/2021 J 2 17.3 ≈ 1 ≈ 0.000052 20926600 −625.14 148.1 0.242 2021 2023 Sheppard Ananke
XXVII Praxidike /prækˈsɪdək/
 
14.9 7 ≈ 0.018 20935400 −625.39 148.3 0.246 2000 2001 Sheppard et al. Ananke
LXIV S/2017 J 3
 
16.5 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 20941000 −625.60 147.9 0.231 2017 2018 Sheppard Ananke
  S/2021 J 1 17.3 ≈ 1 ≈ 0.000052 20954700 −627.14 150.5 0.228 2021 2023 Sheppard Ananke
  S/2003 J 12
 
17.0 ≈ 1 ≈ 0.000052 20963100 −627.24 150.0 0.235 2003 2003 Sheppard Ananke
LXVIII S/2017 J 7 16.6 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 20964800 −626.56 147.3 0.233 2017 2018 Sheppard Ananke
XLII Thelxinoe /θɛlkˈsɪn/ 16.3 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 20976000 −628.03 150.6 0.228 2003 2004 Sheppard & Gladman et al. Ananke
XXIX Thyone /θˈn/
 
15.8 ≈ 4 ≈ 0.0034 20978000 −627.18 147.5 0.233 2001 2002 Sheppard et al. Ananke
  S/2003 J 2
 
16.7 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 20997700 −628.79 150.2 0.225 2003 2003 Sheppard Ananke
XII Ananke /əˈnæŋk/
 
11.7 29.1 ≈ 1.3 21034500 −629.79 147.6 0.237 1951 1951 Nicholson Ananke
  S/2022 J 3 17.4 ≈ 1 ≈ 0.000052 21047700 −630.67 148.2 0.249 2022 2023 Sheppard Ananke
XXIV Iocaste /əˈkæst/
 
15.5 ≈ 5 ≈ 0.0065 21066700 −631.59 148.8 0.227 2000 2001 Sheppard et al. Ananke
XXX Hermippe /hərˈmɪp/
 
15.5 ≈ 4 ≈ 0.0034 21108500 −633.90 150.2 0.219 2001 2002 Sheppard et al. Ananke
LXX S/2017 J 9 16.2 ≈ 3 ≈ 0.0014 21768700 −666.11 155.5 0.200 2017 2018 Sheppard Ananke
LVIII Philophrosyne /fɪləˈfrɒzən/ 16.7 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 22604600 −702.54 146.3 0.229 2003 2003 Sheppard Pasiphae
  S/2016 J 3 16.7 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 22719300 −713.64 164.6 0.251 2016 2023 Sheppard Carme
  S/2022 J 1 17.0 ≈ 1 ≈ 0.000052 22725200 −738.33 164.5 0.257 2022 2023 Sheppard Carme
XXXVIII Pasithee /ˈpæsəθ/
 
16.8 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 22846700 −719.47 164.6 0.270 2001 2002 Sheppard et al. Carme
LXIX S/2017 J 8
 
17.1 ≈ 1 ≈ 0.000052 22849500 −719.76 164.8 0.255 2017 2018 Sheppard Carme
  S/2021 J 6 17.3 ≈ 1 ≈ 0.000052 22870300 −720.97 164.9 0.271 2021 2023 Sheppard et al. Carme
  S/2003 J 24 16.6 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 22887400 −721.60 164.5 0.259 2003 2021 Sheppard et al. Carme
XXXII Eurydome /jʊəˈrɪdəm/
 
16.2 ≈ 3 ≈ 0.0014 22899000 −717.31 149.1 0.294 2001 2002 Sheppard et al. Pasiphae
LVI S/2011 J 2 16.8 ≈ 1 ≈ 0.000052 22909200 −718.32 151.9 0.355 2011 2012 Sheppard Pasiphae
  S/2003 J 4
 
16.7 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 22926500 −718.10 148.2 0.328 2003 2003 Sheppard Pasiphae
XXI Chaldene /kælˈdn/
 
16.0 ≈ 4 ≈ 0.0034 22930500 −723.71 164.7 0.265 2000 2001 Sheppard et al. Carme
LXIII S/2017 J 2
 
16.4 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 22953200 −724.71 164.5 0.272 2017 2018 Sheppard Carme
XXVI Isonoe /ˈsɒn/
 
16.0 ≈ 4 ≈ 0.0034 22981300 −726.27 164.8 0.249 2000 2001 Sheppard et al. Carme
  S/2022 J 2 17.6 ≈ 1 ≈ 0.000052 23013800 −781.56 164.7 0.265 2022 2023 Sheppard Carme
  S/2021 J 4 17.4 ≈ 1 ≈ 0.000052 23019700 −728.28 164.6 0.265 2021 2023 Sheppard Carme
XLIV Kallichore /kəˈlɪkər/ 16.3 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 23021800 −728.26 164.8 0.252 2003 2003 Sheppard Carme
XXV Erinome /ɛˈrɪnəm/
 
16.0 ≈ 3 ≈ 0.0014 23032900 −728.48 164.4 0.276 2000 2001 Sheppard et al. Carme
XXXVII Kale /ˈkl/
 
16.3 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 23052600 −729.64 164.6 0.262 2001 2002 Sheppard et al. Carme
LVII Eirene /ˈrn/ 15.8 ≈ 4 ≈ 0.0034 23055800 −729.84 164.6 0.258 2003 2003 Sheppard Carme
XXXI Aitne /ˈtn/
 
16.0 ≈ 3 ≈ 0.0014 23064400 −730.10 164.6 0.277 2001 2002 Sheppard et al. Carme
XLVII Eukelade /jˈkɛləd/
 
16.0 ≈ 4 ≈ 0.0034 23067400 −730.30 164.6 0.277 2003 2003 Sheppard Carme
XLIII Arche /ˈɑːrk/
 
16.2 ≈ 3 ≈ 0.0014 23097800 −731.88 164.6 0.261 2002 2002 Sheppard Carme
XX Taygete /tˈɪət/
 
15.6 ≈ 5 ≈ 0.0065 23108000 −732.45 164.7 0.253 2000 2001 Sheppard et al. Carme
  S/2016 J 4 17.3 ≈ 1 ≈ 0.000052 23113800 −727.01 147.1 0.294 2016 2023 Sheppard Pasiphae
LXXII S/2011 J 1 16.7 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 23124500 −733.21 164.6 0.271 2011 2012 Sheppard Carme
XI Carme /ˈkɑːrm/
 
10.6 46.7 ≈ 5.3 23144400 −734.19 164.6 0.256 1938 1938 Nicholson Carme
L Herse /ˈhɜːrs/ 16.5 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 23150500 −734.52 164.4 0.262 2003 2003 Gladman et al. Carme
LXI S/2003 J 19 16.6 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 23156400 −734.78 164.7 0.265 2003 2003 Gladman Carme
LI S/2010 J 1
 
16.5 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 23189800 −736.51 164.5 0.252 2010 2011 Jacobson et al. Carme
  S/2003 J 9
 
16.9 ≈ 1 ≈ 0.000052 23199400 −736.86 164.8 0.263 2003 2003 Sheppard Carme
LXVI S/2017 J 5 16.5 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 23206200 −737.28 164.8 0.257 2017 2018 Sheppard Carme
LXVII S/2017 J 6 16.6 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 23245300 −733.99 149.7 0.336 2017 2018 Sheppard Pasiphae
XXIII Kalyke /ˈkælək/
 
15.4 6.9 ≈ 0.017 23302600 −742.02 164.8 0.260 2000 2001 Sheppard et al. Carme
XXXIX Hegemone /həˈɛmən/ 15.9 ≈ 3 ≈ 0.0014 23348700 −739.81 152.6 0.358 2003 2003 Sheppard Pasiphae
  S/2018 J 3 17.3 ≈ 1 ≈ 0.000052 23400300 −747.02 164.9 0.268 2018 2023 Sheppard Carme
  S/2021 J 5 16.8 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 23414600 −747.74 164.9 0.272 2021 2023 Sheppard et al. Carme
VIII Pasiphae /pəˈsɪf/
 
10.1 57.8 ≈ 10 23468200 −743.61 148.4 0.412 1908 1908 Melotte Pasiphae
XXXVI Sponde /ˈspɒnd/
 
16.7 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 23543300 −748.29 149.3 0.322 2001 2002 Sheppard et al. Pasiphae
  S/2003 J 10
 
16.9 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 23576300 −755.43 164.4 0.264 2003 2003 Sheppard Carme
XIX Megaclite /ˌmɛɡəˈklt/
 
15.0 ≈ 5 ≈ 0.0065 23644600 −752.86 149.8 0.421 2000 2001 Sheppard et al. Pasiphae
XLVIII Cyllene /səˈln/ 16.3 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 23654700 −751.97 146.8 0.419 2003 2003 Sheppard Pasiphae
IX Sinope /səˈnp/
 
11.1 35 ≈ 2.2 23683900 −758.85 157.3 0.264 1914 1914 Nicholson Pasiphae
LIX S/2017 J 1
 
16.8 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 23744800 −756.41 145.8 0.328 2017 2017 Sheppard Pasiphae
XLI Aoede /ˈd/ 15.6 ≈ 4 ≈ 0.0034 23778200 −761.42 155.7 0.436 2003 2003 Sheppard Pasiphae
XXVIII Autonoe /ɔːˈtɒn/
 
15.5 ≈ 4 ≈ 0.0034 23792500 −761.00 150.8 0.330 2001 2002 Sheppard et al. Pasiphae
XVII Callirrhoe /kəˈlɪr/
 
14.0 9.6 ≈ 0.046 23795500 −758.87 145.1 0.297 1999 2000 Scotti et al. Pasiphae
  S/2003 J 23
 
16.6 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 23829300 −760.00 144.7 0.313 2003 2004 Sheppard Pasiphae
XLIX Kore /ˈkɔːr/
 
16.6 ≈ 2 ≈ 0.00042 24205200 −776.76 141.5 0.328 2003 2003 Sheppard Pasiphae

Exploration Edit

 
The orbit and motion of the Galilean moons around Jupiter, as captured by JunoCam aboard the Juno spacecraft.
 
Ganymede taken by Juno during its 34th perijove.

Nine spacecraft have visited Jupiter. The first were Pioneer 10 in 1973, and Pioneer 11 a year later, taking low-resolution images of the four Galilean moons and returning data on their atmospheres and radiation belts.[72] The Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 probes visited Jupiter in 1979, discovering the volcanic activity on Io and the presence of water ice on the surface of Europa. Ulysses further studied Jupiter's magnetosphere in 1992 and then again in 2000.

The Galileo spacecraft was the first to enter orbit around Jupiter, arriving in 1995 and studying it until 2003. During this period, Galileo gathered a large amount of information about the Jovian system, making close approaches to all of the Galilean moons and finding evidence for thin atmospheres on three of them, as well as the possibility of liquid water beneath the surfaces of Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto. It also discovered a magnetic field around Ganymede.

Then the Cassini probe to Saturn flew by Jupiter in 2000 and collected data on interactions of the Galilean moons with Jupiter's extended atmosphere. The New Horizons spacecraft flew by Jupiter in 2007 and made improved measurements of its satellites' orbital parameters.

In 2016, the Juno spacecraft imaged the Galilean moons from above their orbital plane as it approached Jupiter orbit insertion, creating a time-lapse movie of their motion.[73] With a mission extension, Juno has since begun close flybys of the Galileans, flying by Ganymede in 2021 followed by Europa and Io in 2022. It is planned to fly by Io again in late 2023 and once more in 2024.

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ The most-recently announced moons of Jupiter are S/2022 J 1, S/2022 J 2, and S/2022 J 3, published in MPECs 2023-D44 to 2023-D46.[2] These add three more to the previous count of 92 from January 2023, bringing the total up to 95.[3]
  2. ^ For comparison, the area of a sphere with diameter 250 km is about the area of Senegal and comparable to the area of Belarus, Syria and Uruguay. The area of a sphere with a diameter of 5 km is about the area of Guernsey and somewhat more than the area of San Marino. (But note that these smaller moons are not spherical.)
  3. ^ Jupiter Mass of 1.8986 × 1027 kg / Mass of Galilean moons 3.93 × 1023 kg = 4,828
  4. ^ Label refers to the Roman numeral attributed to each moon in order of their naming.
  5. ^ Diameters with multiple entries such as "60 × 40 × 34" reflect that the body is not a perfect spheroid and that each of its dimensions has been measured well enough.
  6. ^ The only satellites with measured masses are Amalthea, Himalia, and the four Galilean moons. The masses of the inner satellites are estimated by assuming a density similar to Amalthea's (0.86 g/cm3), while the rest of the irregular satellites are estimated by assuming a spherical volume and a density of 1 g/cm3.
  7. ^ Periods with negative values are retrograde.
  8. ^ "?" refers to group assignments that are not considered sure yet.

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  62. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Planetary Satellite Mean Elements". JPL Solar System Dynamics. NASA. Retrieved 28 March 2022. Note: Orbital elements of regular satellites are with respect to the Laplace plane, while orbital elements of irregular satellites are with respect to the ecliptic.
  63. ^ Nesvorný, David; Beaugé, Cristian; Dones, Luke (March 2004). "Collisional Origin of Families of Irregular Satellites" (PDF). The Astronomical Journal. 127 (3): 1768–1783. Bibcode:2004AJ....127.1768N. doi:10.1086/382099. S2CID 27293848.
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  67. ^ "Amalthea". Merriam-Webster Dictionary.
  68. ^ a b c d Siedelmann P.K.; Abalakin V.K.; Bursa, M.; Davies, M.E.; et al. (2000). (Report). IAU/IAG Working Group on Cartographic Coordinates and Rotational Elements of the Planets and Satellites. Archived from the original on 12 May 2020. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
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  72. ^ Fillius, Walker; McIlwain, Carl; Mogro‐Campero, Antonio; Steinberg, Gerald (1976). "Evidence that pitch angle scattering is an important loss mechanism for energetic electrons in the inner radiation belt of Jupiter". Geophysical Research Letters. 3 (1): 33–36. Bibcode:1976GeoRL...3...33F. doi:10.1029/GL003i001p00033. ISSN 1944-8007.
  73. ^ Juno Approach Movie of Jupiter and the Galilean Moons, NASA, July 2016

External links Edit

  • Scott S. Sheppard: Moons of Jupiter
  • Scott S. Sheppard: The Jupiter Satellite and Moon Page
  • by NASA's Solar System Exploration
  • Archive of Jupiter System Articles in Planetary Science Research Discoveries
  • Tilmann Denk: Outer Moons of Jupiter

moons, jupiter, other, uses, disambiguation, there, moons, jupiter, with, confirmed, orbits, march, 2023, update, note, this, number, does, include, number, meter, sized, moonlets, thought, shed, from, inner, moons, hundreds, possible, kilometer, sized, outer,. For other uses see Moons of Jupiter disambiguation There are 95 moons of Jupiter with confirmed orbits as of 23 March 2023 update 1 note 1 This number does not include a number of meter sized moonlets thought to be shed from the inner moons nor hundreds of possible kilometer sized outer irregular moons that were only briefly captured by telescopes 4 All together Jupiter s moons form a satellite system called the Jovian system The most massive of the moons are the four Galilean moons Io Europa Ganymede and Callisto which were independently discovered in 1610 by Galileo Galilei and Simon Marius and were the first objects found to orbit a body that was neither Earth nor the Sun Much more recently beginning in 1892 dozens of far smaller Jovian moons have been detected and have received the names of lovers or other sexual partners or daughters of the Roman god Jupiter or his Greek equivalent Zeus The Galilean moons are by far the largest and most massive objects to orbit Jupiter with the remaining 91 known moons and the rings together composing just 0 003 of the total orbiting mass A montage of Jupiter and its four largest moons distance and sizes not to scale Of Jupiter s moons eight are regular satellites with prograde and nearly circular orbits that are not greatly inclined with respect to Jupiter s equatorial plane The Galilean satellites are nearly spherical in shape due to their planetary mass and are just massive enough that they would be considered major planets if they were in direct orbit around the Sun The other four regular satellites known as the inner moons are much smaller and closer to Jupiter these serve as sources of the dust that makes up Jupiter s rings The remainder of Jupiter s moons are outer irregular satellites whose prograde and retrograde orbits are much farther from Jupiter and have high inclinations and eccentricities The largest of these moons were likely asteroids that were captured from solar orbits by Jupiter before impacts with other small bodies shattered them into many kilometer sized fragments forming collisional families of moons sharing similar orbits Jupiter is expected to have about 100 irregular moons larger than 1 km 0 6 mi in diameter plus around 500 more smaller retrograde moons down to diameters of 0 8 km 0 5 mi 5 Of the 87 known irregular moons of Jupiter 38 of them have not yet been officially named Contents 1 Characteristics 2 Origin and evolution 3 History and discovery 3 1 Visual observations 3 2 Photographic and spacecraft observations 3 3 Digital telescopic observations 4 Naming 5 Groups 5 1 Regular satellites 5 2 Irregular satellites 6 List 7 Exploration 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksCharacteristics Edit nbsp The Galilean moons From left to right in order of increasing distance from Jupiter Io Europa Ganymede Callisto The physical and orbital characteristics of the moons vary widely The four Galileans are all over 3 100 kilometres 1 900 mi in diameter the largest Galilean Ganymede is the ninth largest object in the Solar System after the Sun and seven of the planets Ganymede being larger than Mercury All other Jovian moons are less than 250 kilometres 160 mi in diameter with most barely exceeding 5 kilometres 3 1 mi note 2 Their orbital shapes range from nearly perfectly circular to highly eccentric and inclined and many revolve in the direction opposite to Jupiter s rotation retrograde motion Orbital periods range from seven hours taking less time than Jupiter does to rotate around its axis to almost three Earth years Origin and evolution Edit nbsp The relative masses of the Jovian moons Those smaller than Europa are not visible at this scale and combined would only be visible at 100 magnification Jupiter s regular satellites are believed to have formed from a circumplanetary disk a ring of accreting gas and solid debris analogous to a protoplanetary disk 6 7 They may be the remnants of a score of Galilean mass satellites that formed early in Jupiter s history 6 8 Simulations suggest that while the disk had a relatively high mass at any given moment over time a substantial fraction several tens of a percent of the mass of Jupiter captured from the solar nebula was passed through it However only 2 of the proto disk mass of Jupiter is required to explain the existing satellites 6 Thus several generations of Galilean mass satellites may have been in Jupiter s early history Each generation of moons might have spiraled into Jupiter because of drag from the disk with new moons then forming from the new debris captured from the solar nebula 6 By the time the present possibly fifth generation formed the disk had thinned so that it no longer greatly interfered with the moons orbits 8 The current Galilean moons were still affected falling into and being partially protected by an orbital resonance with each other which still exists for Io Europa and Ganymede they are in a 1 2 4 resonance Ganymede s larger mass means that it would have migrated inward at a faster rate than Europa or Io 6 Tidal dissipation in the Jovian system is still ongoing and Callisto will likely be captured into the resonance in about 1 5 billion years creating a 1 2 4 8 chain 9 The outer irregular moons are thought to have originated from captured asteroids whereas the protolunar disk was still massive enough to absorb much of their momentum and thus capture them into orbit Many are believed to have been broken up by mechanical stresses during capture or afterward by collisions with other small bodies producing the moons we see today 10 History and discovery EditSee also Timeline of discovery of Solar System planets and their moons Visual observations Edit nbsp Jupiter and the Galilean moons as seen through a 25 cm 10 in Meade LX200 telescopeChinese historian Xi Zezong claimed that the earliest record of a Jovian moon Ganymede or Callisto was a note by Chinese astronomer Gan De of an observation around 364 BC regarding a reddish star 11 However the first certain observations of Jupiter s satellites were those of Galileo Galilei in 1609 12 By January 1610 he had sighted the four massive Galilean moons with his 20 magnification telescope and he published his results in March 1610 13 Simon Marius had independently discovered the moons one day after Galileo although he did not publish his book on the subject until 1614 Even so the names Marius assigned are used today Ganymede Callisto Io and Europa 14 No additional satellites were discovered until E E Barnard observed Amalthea in 1892 15 Photographic and spacecraft observations Edit nbsp Voyager 1 discovery image of the inner moon Metis on 4 March 1979 showing the moon s tiny silhouette against the backdrop of Jupiter s cloudsWith the aid of telescopic photography with photographic plates further discoveries followed quickly over the course of the 20th century Himalia was discovered in 1904 16 Elara in 1905 17 Pasiphae in 1908 18 Sinope in 1914 19 Lysithea and Carme in 1938 20 Ananke in 1951 21 and Leda in 1974 22 By the time that the Voyager space probes reached Jupiter around 1979 thirteen moons had been discovered not including Themisto which had been observed in 1975 23 but was lost until 2000 due to insufficient initial observation data The Voyager spacecraft discovered an additional three inner moons in 1979 Metis Adrastea and Thebe 24 Digital telescopic observations Edit No additional moons were discovered until two decades later with the fortuitous discovery of Callirrhoe by the Spacewatch survey in October 1999 25 During the 1990s photographic plates phased out as digital charge coupled device CCD cameras began emerging in telescopes on Earth allowing for wide field surveys of the sky at unprecedented sensitivities and ushering in a wave of new moon discoveries 26 Scott Sheppard then a graduate student of David Jewitt demonstrated this extended capability of CCD cameras in a survey conducted with the Mauna Kea Observatory s 2 2 meter 88 in UH88 telescope in November 2000 discovering eleven new irregular moons of Jupiter including the previously lost Themisto with the aid of automated computer algorithms 27 From 2001 onward Sheppard and Jewitt alongside other collaborators continued surveying for Jovian irregular moons with the 3 6 meter 12 ft Canada France Hawaii Telescope CFHT discovering an additional eleven in December 2001 one in October 2002 and nineteen in February 2003 27 1 At the same time another independent team led by Brett J Gladman also used the CFHT in 2003 to search for Jovian irregular moons discovering four and co discovering two with Sheppard 1 28 29 From the start to end of these CCD based surveys in 2000 2004 Jupiter s known moon count had grown from 17 to 63 25 28 All of these moons discovered after 2000 are faint and tiny with apparent magnitudes between 22 23 and diameters less than 10 km 6 2 mi 27 As a result many could not be reliably tracked and ended up becoming lost 30 Beginning in 2009 a team of astronomers namely Mike Alexandersen Marina Brozovic Brett Gladman Robert Jacobson and Christian Veillet began a campaign to recover Jupiter s lost irregular moons using the CFHT and Palomar Observatory s 5 1 meter 17 ft Hale Telescope 31 30 They discovered two previously unknown Jovian irregular moons during recovery efforts in September 2010 prompting further follow up observations to confirm these by 2011 31 32 One of these moons S 2010 J 2 now Jupiter LII has an apparent magnitude of 24 and a diameter of only 1 2 km 0 62 1 2 mi making it one of the faintest and smallest confirmed moons of Jupiter even as of 2023 update 33 4 Meanwhile in September 2011 Scott Sheppard now a faculty member of the Carnegie Institution for Science 4 discovered two more irregular moons using the institution s 6 5 meter 21 ft Magellan Telescopes at Las Campanas Observatory raising Jupiter s known moon count to 67 34 Although Sheppard s two moons were followed up and confirmed by 2012 both became lost due to insufficient observational coverage 30 35 In 2016 while surveying for distant trans Neptunian objects with the Magellan Telescopes Sheppard serendipitously observed a region of the sky located near Jupiter enticing him to search for Jovian irregular moons as a detour In collaboration with Chadwick Trujillo and David Tholen Sheppard continued surveying around Jupiter from 2016 to 2018 using the Cerro Tololo Observatory s 4 0 meter 13 ft Victor M Blanco Telescope and Mauna Kea Observatory s 8 2 meter 27 ft Subaru Telescope 36 37 In the process Sheppard s team recovered several lost moons of Jupiter from 2003 to 2011 and reported two new Jovian irregular moons in June 2017 38 Then in July 2018 Sheppard s team announced ten more irregular moons confirmed from 2016 to 2018 observations bringing Jupiter s known moon count to 79 Among these was Valetudo which has an unusually distant prograde orbit that crosses paths with the retrograde irregular moons 36 37 Several more unidentified Jovian irregular satellites were detected in Sheppard s 2016 2018 search but were too faint for follow up confirmation 37 39 10 From November 2021 to January 2023 Sheppard discovered twelve more irregular moons of Jupiter and confirmed them in archival survey imagery from 2003 to 2018 bringing the total count to 92 40 2 3 Among these was S 2018 J 4 a highly inclined prograde moon that is now known to be in same orbital grouping as the moon Carpo which was previously thought to be solitary 3 On 22 February 2023 Sheppard announced three more moons discovered in a 2022 survey now bringing Jupiter s total known moon count to 95 2 In a February 2023 interview with NPR Sheppard noted that he and his team are currently tracking even more moons of Jupiter which should place Jupiter s moon count over 100 once confirmed over the next two years 41 Many more irregular moons of Jupiter will inevitably be discovered in the future especially after the beginning of deep sky surveys by the upcoming Vera C Rubin Observatory and Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope in the mid 2020s 42 43 The Rubin Observatory s 8 4 meter 28 ft aperture telescope and 3 5 square degree field of view will probe Jupiter s irregular moons down to diameters of 1 km 0 6 mi 10 265 at apparent magnitudes of 24 5 with the potential of increasing the known population by up to tenfold 42 292 Likewise the Roman Space Telescope s 2 4 meter 7 9 ft aperture and 0 28 square degree field of view will probe Jupiter s irregular moons down to diameters of 0 3 km 0 2 mi at magnitude 27 7 with the potential of discovering approximately 1 000 Jovian moons above this size 43 24 Discovering these many irregular satellites will help reveal their population s size distribution and collisional histories which will place further constraints to how the Solar System formed 43 24 25 Discovery of Outer Planet Moons Graphs are temporarily unavailable due to technical issues Moons of Jupiter Moons of Saturn Moons of Uranus Moons of NeptuneNaming EditMain article Naming of moons nbsp Galilean moons around Jupiter Jupiter Io Europa Ganymede Callisto nbsp Orbits of Jupiter s inner moons within its ringsThe Galilean moons of Jupiter Io Europa Ganymede and Callisto were named by Simon Marius soon after their discovery in 1610 44 However these names fell out of favor until the 20th century The astronomical literature instead simply referred to Jupiter I Jupiter II etc or the first satellite of Jupiter Jupiter s second satellite and so on 44 The names Io Europa Ganymede and Callisto became popular in the mid 20th century 45 whereas the rest of the moons remained unnamed and were usually numbered in Roman numerals V 5 to XII 12 46 47 Jupiter V was discovered in 1892 and given the name Amalthea by a popular though unofficial convention a name first used by French astronomer Camille Flammarion 48 49 The other moons were simply labeled by their Roman numeral e g Jupiter IX in the majority of astronomical literature until the 1970s 50 Several different suggestions were made for names of Jupiter s outer satellites but none were universally accepted until 1975 when the International Astronomical Union s IAU Task Group for Outer Solar System Nomenclature granted names to satellites V XIII 51 and provided for a formal naming process for future satellites still to be discovered 51 The practice was to name newly discovered moons of Jupiter after lovers and favorites of the god Jupiter Zeus and since 2004 also after their descendants 48 All of Jupiter s satellites from XXXIV Euporie onward are named after descendants of Jupiter or Zeus 48 except LIII Dia named after a lover of Jupiter Names ending with a or o are used for prograde irregular satellites the latter for highly inclined satellites and names ending with e are used for retrograde irregulars 26 With the discovery of smaller kilometre sized moons around Jupiter the IAU has established an additional convention to limit the naming of small moons with absolute magnitudes greater than 18 or diameters smaller than 1 km 0 6 mi 52 Some of the most recently confirmed moons have not received names 4 Some asteroids share the same names as moons of Jupiter 9 Metis 38 Leda 52 Europa 85 Io 113 Amalthea 239 Adrastea Two more asteroids previously shared the names of Jovian moons until spelling differences were made permanent by the IAU Ganymede and asteroid 1036 Ganymed and Callisto and asteroid 204 Kallisto Groups EditRegular satellites Edit These have prograde and nearly circular orbits of low inclination and are split into two groups Inner satellites or Amalthea group Metis Adrastea Amalthea and Thebe These orbit very close to Jupiter the innermost two orbit in less than a Jovian day The latter two are respectively the fifth and seventh largest moons in the Jovian system Observations suggest that at least the largest member Amalthea did not form on its present orbit but farther from the planet or that it is a captured Solar System body 53 These moons along with a number of seen and as yet unseen inner moonlets see Amalthea moonlets replenish and maintain Jupiter s faint ring system Metis and Adrastea help to maintain Jupiter s main ring whereas Amalthea and Thebe each maintain their own faint outer rings 54 55 Main group or Galilean moons Io Europa Ganymede and Callisto They are some of the largest objects in the Solar System outside the Sun and the eight planets in terms of mass larger than any known dwarf planet Ganymede exceeds and Callisto nearly equals even the planet Mercury in diameter though they are less massive They are respectively the fourth sixth first and third largest natural satellites in the Solar System containing approximately 99 997 of the total mass in orbit around Jupiter while Jupiter is almost 5 000 times more massive than the Galilean moons note 3 The inner moons are in a 1 2 4 orbital resonance Models suggest that they formed by slow accretion in the low density Jovian subnebula a disc of the gas and dust that existed around Jupiter after its formation which lasted up to 10 million years in the case of Callisto 56 Europa Ganymede and Callisto are suspected of having subsurface water oceans 57 58 and Io may have a subsurface magma ocean 59 Irregular satellites Edit nbsp Orbits and positions of Jupiter s irregular satellites as of 1 January 2021 Prograde orbits are colored blue while retrograde orbits are colored red Main article Irregular satellite The irregular satellites are substantially smaller objects with more distant and eccentric orbits They form families with shared similarities in orbit semi major axis inclination eccentricity and composition it is believed that these are at least partially collisional families that were created when larger but still small parent bodies were shattered by impacts from asteroids captured by Jupiter s gravitational field These families bear the names of their largest members The identification of satellite families is tentative but the following are typically listed 4 60 61 Prograde satellites Themisto is the innermost irregular moon and is not part of a known family 4 60 The Himalia group is confined within semi major axes between 11 12 million km 6 8 7 5 million mi inclinations between 27 29 and eccentricities between 0 12 and 0 21 62 It has been suggested that the group could be a remnant of the break up of an asteroid from the asteroid belt 60 The Carpo group includes two known moons on very high orbital inclinations of 50 and semi major axes between 16 17 million km 9 9 10 6 million mi 4 Due to their exceptionally high inclinations the moons of the Carpo group are subject to gravitational perturbations that induce the Lidov Kozai resonance in their orbits which cause their eccentricities and inclinations to periodically oscillate in correspondence with each other 35 The Lidov Kozai resonance can significantly alter the orbits of these moons for example the eccentricity and inclination of the group s namesake Carpo can fluctuate between 0 19 0 69 and 44 59 respectively 35 Valetudo is the outermost prograde moon and is not part of a known family Its prograde orbit crosses paths with several moons that have retrograde orbits and may in the future collide with them 37 Retrograde satellites The Carme group is tightly confined within semi major axes between 22 24 million km 14 15 million mi inclinations between 164 166 and eccentricities between 0 25 and 0 28 62 It is very homogeneous in color light red and is believed to have originated as collisional fragments from a D type asteroid progenitor possibly a Jupiter trojan 27 The Ananke group has a relatively wider spread than the previous groups with semi major axes between 19 22 million km 12 14 million mi inclinations between 144 156 and eccentricities between 0 09 and 0 25 62 Most of the members appear gray and are believed to have formed from the breakup of a captured asteroid 27 The Pasiphae group is quite dispersed with semi major axes spread over 22 25 million km 14 16 million mi inclinations between 141 and 157 and higher eccentricities between 0 23 and 0 44 62 The colors also vary significantly from red to grey which might be the result of multiple collisions Sinope sometimes included in the Pasiphae group 27 is red and given the difference in inclination it could have been captured independently 60 Pasiphae and Sinope are also trapped in secular resonances with Jupiter 63 Based on their survey discoveries in 2000 2003 Sheppard and Jewitt predicted that Jupiter should have approximately 100 irregular satellites larger than 1 km 0 6 mi in diameter or brighter than magnitude 24 27 262 Survey observations by Alexandersen et al in 2010 2011 agreed with this prediction estimating that approximately 40 Jovian irregular satellites of this size remained undiscovered in 2012 31 4 In September 2020 researchers from the University of British Columbia identified 45 candidate irregular moons from an analysis of archival images taken in 2010 by the CFHT 64 These candidates were mainly small and faint down to magnitude of 25 7 or above 0 8 km 0 5 mi in diameter From the number of candidate moons detected within a sky area of one square degree the team extrapolated that the population of retrograde Jovian moons brighter than magnitude 25 7 is around 600 600 300 within a factor of 2 5 6 Although the team considers their characterized candidates to be likely moons of Jupiter they all remain unconfirmed due to insufficient observation data for determining reliable orbits 64 The true population of Jovian irregular moons is likely complete down to magnitude 23 2 at diameters over 3 km 1 9 mi as of 2020 update 5 6 31 4 List Edit nbsp Orbital diagram of the orbital inclination and orbital distances for Jupiter s rings and moon system at various scales Notable moons moon groups and rings are individually labeled Open the image for full resolution The moons of Jupiter are listed below by orbital period Moons massive enough for their surfaces to have collapsed into a spheroid are highlighted in bold These are the four Galilean moons which are comparable in size to the Moon The other moons are much smaller with the least massive Galilean moon being more than 7 000 times more massive than the most massive of the other moons The irregular captured moons are shaded light gray and orange when prograde and yellow red and dark gray when retrograde The orbits and mean distances of the irregular moons are highly variable over short timescales due to frequent planetary and solar perturbations 35 so proper orbital elements which are averaged over a period of time are preferably used The proper orbital elements of the irregular moons listed here are averaged over a 400 year numerical integration by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory for the above reasons they may strongly differ from osculating orbital elements provided by other sources 62 Otherwise recently discovered irregular moons without published proper elements are temporarily listed here with inaccurate osculating orbital elements that are italicized to distinguish them from other irregular moons with proper orbital elements Some of the irregular moons proper orbital periods in this list may not scale accordingly with their proper semi major axes due to the aforementioned perturbations The irregular moons proper orbital elements are all based on the reference epoch of 1 January 2000 62 Some irregular moons have only been observed briefly for a year or two but their orbits are known accurately enough that they will not be lost to positional uncertainties 35 4 As of February 2023 update only three known moons of Jupiter S 2022 J 1 S 2022 J 2 and S 2022 J 3 have observation arcs shorter than one year and are therefore at risk of becoming lost 4 Key Inner moons Galilean moons Themisto group Himalia group Carpo group Valetudo group Ananke group Carme group Pasiphae group Label note 4 Name Pronunciation Image Abs magn 65 Diameter km 4 note 5 Mass 1016 kg 66 note 6 Semi major axis km 62 Orbital period d 62 note 7 Inclination 62 Eccentricity 4 Discovery year 1 Year announced Discoverer 48 1 Group note 8 XVI Metis ˈ m iː t e s nbsp 10 5 43 60 40 34 3 6 128000 0 2948 7h 04m 29s 0 060 0 0002 1979 1980 Synnott Voyager 1 InnerXV Adrastea ae d r e ˈ s t iː e nbsp 12 0 16 4 20 16 14 0 20 129000 0 2983 7h 09m 30s 0 030 0 0015 1979 1979 Jewitt Voyager 2 InnerV Amalthea ae m e l ˈ 8 iː e 67 nbsp 7 1 167 250 146 128 208 181400 0 4999 11h 59m 53s 0 374 0 0032 1892 1892 Barnard InnerXIV Thebe ˈ 8 iː b iː nbsp 9 0 98 6 116 98 84 43 221900 0 6761 16h 13m 35s 1 076 0 0175 1979 1980 Synnott Voyager 1 InnerI Io ˈ aɪ oʊ nbsp 1 7 3643 2 3660 3637 3631 8931 900 421800 1 7627 1d 18h 18m 20s 0 050 68 0 0041 1610 1610 Galileo GalileanII Europa j ʊeˈr oʊ p e 69 nbsp 1 4 3121 6 4799 800 671100 3 5255 3d 12h 36m 40s 0 470 68 0 0090 1610 1610 Galileo GalileanIII Ganymede ˈ ɡ ae n e m iː d 70 71 nbsp 2 1 5268 2 14819 000 1070 400 7 1556 0 200 68 0 0013 1610 1610 Galileo GalileanIV Callisto k e ˈ l ɪ s t oʊ nbsp 1 2 4820 6 10759 000 1882 700 16 690 0 192 68 0 0074 1610 1610 Galileo GalileanXVIII Themisto 8 e ˈ m ɪ s t oʊ nbsp 13 3 9 0 038 7398 500 130 03 43 8 0 340 1975 2000 1975 Kowal amp Roemer Sheppard et al ThemistoXIII Leda ˈ l iː d e nbsp 12 7 21 5 0 52 11146 400 240 93 28 6 0 162 1974 1974 Kowal HimaliaLXXI Ersa ˈ ɜːr s e nbsp 16 0 3 0 0014 11401 000 249 23 29 1 0 116 2018 2018 Sheppard Himalia S 2018 J 2 16 5 3 0 0014 11419 700 249 92 28 3 0 152 2018 2022 Sheppard HimaliaVI Himalia h ɪ ˈ m eɪ l i e nbsp 8 0 139 6 150 120 420 11440 600 250 56 28 1 0 160 1904 1905 Perrine HimaliaLXV Pandia p ae n ˈ d aɪ e nbsp 16 2 3 0 0014 11481 000 251 91 29 0 0 179 2017 2018 Sheppard HimaliaX Lysithea l aɪ ˈ s ɪ 8 i e nbsp 11 2 42 2 3 9 11700 800 259 20 27 2 0 117 1938 1938 Nicholson HimaliaVII Elara ˈ ɛ l er e nbsp 9 7 79 9 27 11712 300 259 64 27 9 0 211 1905 1905 Perrine Himalia S 2011 J 3 16 3 3 0 0014 11716 800 259 84 27 6 0 192 2011 2022 Sheppard HimaliaLIII Dia ˈ d aɪ e nbsp 16 1 4 0 0034 12260 300 278 21 29 0 0 232 2000 2001 Sheppard et al Himalia S 2018 J 4 16 7 2 0 00042 16328 500 427 63 50 2 0 177 2018 2023 Sheppard CarpoXLVI Carpo ˈ k ɑːr p oʊ nbsp 16 2 3 0 0014 17042 300 456 29 53 2 0 416 2003 2003 Sheppard CarpoLXII Valetudo v ae l e ˈ tj uː d oʊ nbsp 17 0 1 0 000052 18694 200 527 61 34 5 0 217 2016 2018 Sheppard ValetudoXXXIV Euporie ˈ j uː p e r iː nbsp 16 3 2 0 00042 19265 800 550 69 145 7 0 148 2001 2002 Sheppard et al AnankeLV S 2003 J 18 nbsp 16 4 2 0 00042 20336 300 598 12 145 3 0 090 2003 2003 Gladman AnankeLX Eupheme j uː ˈ f iː m iː nbsp 16 6 2 0 00042 20768 600 617 73 148 0 0 241 2003 2003 Sheppard Ananke S 2021 J 3 17 2 2 0 00042 20776 700 618 33 147 9 0 239 2021 2023 Sheppard AnankeLII S 2010 J 2 nbsp 17 4 1 0 000052 20793 000 618 84 148 1 0 248 2010 2011 Veillet AnankeLIV S 2016 J 1 nbsp 17 0 1 0 000052 20802 600 618 49 144 7 0 232 2016 2017 Sheppard AnankeXL Mneme ˈ n iː m iː nbsp 16 3 2 0 00042 20821 000 620 07 148 0 0 247 2003 2003 Sheppard amp Gladman AnankeXXXIII Euanthe j uː ˈ ae n 8 iː nbsp 16 4 3 0 0014 20827 000 620 44 148 0 0 239 2001 2002 Sheppard et al Ananke S 2003 J 16 nbsp 16 3 2 0 00042 20882 600 622 88 148 0 0 243 2003 2003 Gladman AnankeXXII Harpalyke h ɑːr ˈ p ae l e k iː nbsp 15 9 4 0 0034 20892 100 623 32 147 7 0 232 2000 2001 Sheppard et al AnankeXXXV Orthosie ɔːr ˈ 8 oʊ z iː nbsp 16 6 2 0 00042 20901 000 622 59 144 3 0 299 2001 2002 Sheppard et al AnankeXLV Helike ˈ h ɛ l e k iː nbsp 16 0 4 0 0034 20915 700 626 33 154 4 0 153 2003 2003 Sheppard Ananke S 2021 J 2 17 3 1 0 000052 20926 600 625 14 148 1 0 242 2021 2023 Sheppard AnankeXXVII Praxidike p r ae k ˈ s ɪ d e k iː nbsp 14 9 7 0 018 20935 400 625 39 148 3 0 246 2000 2001 Sheppard et al AnankeLXIV S 2017 J 3 nbsp 16 5 2 0 00042 20941 000 625 60 147 9 0 231 2017 2018 Sheppard Ananke S 2021 J 1 17 3 1 0 000052 20954 700 627 14 150 5 0 228 2021 2023 Sheppard Ananke S 2003 J 12 nbsp 17 0 1 0 000052 20963 100 627 24 150 0 0 235 2003 2003 Sheppard AnankeLXVIII S 2017 J 7 16 6 2 0 00042 20964 800 626 56 147 3 0 233 2017 2018 Sheppard AnankeXLII Thelxinoe 8 ɛ l k ˈ s ɪ n oʊ iː 16 3 2 0 00042 20976 000 628 03 150 6 0 228 2003 2004 Sheppard amp Gladman et al AnankeXXIX Thyone 8 aɪ ˈ oʊ n iː nbsp 15 8 4 0 0034 20978 000 627 18 147 5 0 233 2001 2002 Sheppard et al Ananke S 2003 J 2 nbsp 16 7 2 0 00042 20997 700 628 79 150 2 0 225 2003 2003 Sheppard AnankeXII Ananke e ˈ n ae ŋ k iː nbsp 11 7 29 1 1 3 21034 500 629 79 147 6 0 237 1951 1951 Nicholson Ananke S 2022 J 3 17 4 1 0 000052 21047 700 630 67 148 2 0 249 2022 2023 Sheppard AnankeXXIV Iocaste aɪ e ˈ k ae s t iː nbsp 15 5 5 0 0065 21066 700 631 59 148 8 0 227 2000 2001 Sheppard et al AnankeXXX Hermippe h er ˈ m ɪ p iː nbsp 15 5 4 0 0034 21108 500 633 90 150 2 0 219 2001 2002 Sheppard et al AnankeLXX S 2017 J 9 16 2 3 0 0014 21768 700 666 11 155 5 0 200 2017 2018 Sheppard AnankeLVIII Philophrosyne f ɪ l e ˈ f r ɒ z e n iː 16 7 2 0 00042 22604 600 702 54 146 3 0 229 2003 2003 Sheppard Pasiphae S 2016 J 3 16 7 2 0 00042 22719 300 713 64 164 6 0 251 2016 2023 Sheppard Carme S 2022 J 1 17 0 1 0 000052 22725 200 738 33 164 5 0 257 2022 2023 Sheppard CarmeXXXVIII Pasithee ˈ p ae s e 8 iː nbsp 16 8 2 0 00042 22846 700 719 47 164 6 0 270 2001 2002 Sheppard et al CarmeLXIX S 2017 J 8 nbsp 17 1 1 0 000052 22849 500 719 76 164 8 0 255 2017 2018 Sheppard Carme S 2021 J 6 17 3 1 0 000052 22870 300 720 97 164 9 0 271 2021 2023 Sheppard et al Carme S 2003 J 24 16 6 2 0 00042 22887 400 721 60 164 5 0 259 2003 2021 Sheppard et al CarmeXXXII Eurydome j ʊeˈr ɪ d e m iː nbsp 16 2 3 0 0014 22899 000 717 31 149 1 0 294 2001 2002 Sheppard et al PasiphaeLVI S 2011 J 2 16 8 1 0 000052 22909 200 718 32 151 9 0 355 2011 2012 Sheppard Pasiphae S 2003 J 4 nbsp 16 7 2 0 00042 22926 500 718 10 148 2 0 328 2003 2003 Sheppard PasiphaeXXI Chaldene k ae l ˈ d iː n iː nbsp 16 0 4 0 0034 22930 500 723 71 164 7 0 265 2000 2001 Sheppard et al CarmeLXIII S 2017 J 2 nbsp 16 4 2 0 00042 22953 200 724 71 164 5 0 272 2017 2018 Sheppard CarmeXXVI Isonoe aɪ ˈ s ɒ n oʊ iː nbsp 16 0 4 0 0034 22981 300 726 27 164 8 0 249 2000 2001 Sheppard et al Carme S 2022 J 2 17 6 1 0 000052 23013 800 781 56 164 7 0 265 2022 2023 Sheppard Carme S 2021 J 4 17 4 1 0 000052 23019 700 728 28 164 6 0 265 2021 2023 Sheppard CarmeXLIV Kallichore k e ˈ l ɪ k e r iː 16 3 2 0 00042 23021 800 728 26 164 8 0 252 2003 2003 Sheppard CarmeXXV Erinome ɛ ˈ r ɪ n e m iː nbsp 16 0 3 0 0014 23032 900 728 48 164 4 0 276 2000 2001 Sheppard et al CarmeXXXVII Kale ˈ k eɪ l iː nbsp 16 3 2 0 00042 23052 600 729 64 164 6 0 262 2001 2002 Sheppard et al CarmeLVII Eirene aɪ ˈ r iː n iː 15 8 4 0 0034 23055 800 729 84 164 6 0 258 2003 2003 Sheppard CarmeXXXI Aitne ˈ eɪ t n iː nbsp 16 0 3 0 0014 23064 400 730 10 164 6 0 277 2001 2002 Sheppard et al CarmeXLVII Eukelade j uː ˈ k ɛ l e d iː nbsp 16 0 4 0 0034 23067 400 730 30 164 6 0 277 2003 2003 Sheppard CarmeXLIII Arche ˈ ɑːr k iː nbsp 16 2 3 0 0014 23097 800 731 88 164 6 0 261 2002 2002 Sheppard CarmeXX Taygete t eɪ ˈ ɪ dʒ e t iː nbsp 15 6 5 0 0065 23108 000 732 45 164 7 0 253 2000 2001 Sheppard et al Carme S 2016 J 4 17 3 1 0 000052 23113 800 727 01 147 1 0 294 2016 2023 Sheppard PasiphaeLXXII S 2011 J 1 16 7 2 0 00042 23124 500 733 21 164 6 0 271 2011 2012 Sheppard CarmeXI Carme ˈ k ɑːr m iː nbsp 10 6 46 7 5 3 23144 400 734 19 164 6 0 256 1938 1938 Nicholson CarmeL Herse ˈ h ɜːr s iː 16 5 2 0 00042 23150 500 734 52 164 4 0 262 2003 2003 Gladman et al CarmeLXI S 2003 J 19 16 6 2 0 00042 23156 400 734 78 164 7 0 265 2003 2003 Gladman CarmeLI S 2010 J 1 nbsp 16 5 2 0 00042 23189 800 736 51 164 5 0 252 2010 2011 Jacobson et al Carme S 2003 J 9 nbsp 16 9 1 0 000052 23199 400 736 86 164 8 0 263 2003 2003 Sheppard CarmeLXVI S 2017 J 5 16 5 2 0 00042 23206 200 737 28 164 8 0 257 2017 2018 Sheppard CarmeLXVII S 2017 J 6 16 6 2 0 00042 23245 300 733 99 149 7 0 336 2017 2018 Sheppard PasiphaeXXIII Kalyke ˈ k ae l e k iː nbsp 15 4 6 9 0 017 23302 600 742 02 164 8 0 260 2000 2001 Sheppard et al CarmeXXXIX Hegemone h e ˈ dʒ ɛ m e n iː 15 9 3 0 0014 23348 700 739 81 152 6 0 358 2003 2003 Sheppard Pasiphae S 2018 J 3 17 3 1 0 000052 23400 300 747 02 164 9 0 268 2018 2023 Sheppard Carme S 2021 J 5 16 8 2 0 00042 23414 600 747 74 164 9 0 272 2021 2023 Sheppard et al CarmeVIII Pasiphae p e ˈ s ɪ f eɪ iː nbsp 10 1 57 8 10 23468 200 743 61 148 4 0 412 1908 1908 Melotte PasiphaeXXXVI Sponde ˈ s p ɒ n d iː nbsp 16 7 2 0 00042 23543 300 748 29 149 3 0 322 2001 2002 Sheppard et al Pasiphae S 2003 J 10 nbsp 16 9 2 0 00042 23576 300 755 43 164 4 0 264 2003 2003 Sheppard CarmeXIX Megaclite ˌ m ɛ ɡ e ˈ k l aɪ t iː nbsp 15 0 5 0 0065 23644 600 752 86 149 8 0 421 2000 2001 Sheppard et al PasiphaeXLVIII Cyllene s e ˈ l iː n iː 16 3 2 0 00042 23654 700 751 97 146 8 0 419 2003 2003 Sheppard PasiphaeIX Sinope s e ˈ n oʊ p iː nbsp 11 1 35 2 2 23683 900 758 85 157 3 0 264 1914 1914 Nicholson PasiphaeLIX S 2017 J 1 nbsp 16 8 2 0 00042 23744 800 756 41 145 8 0 328 2017 2017 Sheppard PasiphaeXLI Aoede eɪ ˈ iː d iː 15 6 4 0 0034 23778 200 761 42 155 7 0 436 2003 2003 Sheppard PasiphaeXXVIII Autonoe ɔː ˈ t ɒ n oʊ iː nbsp 15 5 4 0 0034 23792 500 761 00 150 8 0 330 2001 2002 Sheppard et al PasiphaeXVII Callirrhoe k e ˈ l ɪr oʊ iː nbsp 14 0 9 6 0 046 23795 500 758 87 145 1 0 297 1999 2000 Scotti et al Pasiphae S 2003 J 23 nbsp 16 6 2 0 00042 23829 300 760 00 144 7 0 313 2003 2004 Sheppard PasiphaeXLIX Kore ˈ k ɔːr iː nbsp 16 6 2 0 00042 24205 200 776 76 141 5 0 328 2003 2003 Sheppard PasiphaeExploration EditMain articles Exploration of Jupiter Ganymede moon Exploration Europa moon Exploration Callisto moon Exploration and Io moon Observational history nbsp The orbit and motion of the Galilean moons around Jupiter as captured by JunoCam aboard the Juno spacecraft nbsp Ganymede taken by Juno during its 34th perijove Nine spacecraft have visited Jupiter The first were Pioneer 10 in 1973 and Pioneer 11 a year later taking low resolution images of the four Galilean moons and returning data on their atmospheres and radiation belts 72 The Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 probes visited Jupiter in 1979 discovering the volcanic activity on Io and the presence of water ice on the surface of Europa Ulysses further studied Jupiter s magnetosphere in 1992 and then again in 2000 The Galileo spacecraft was the first to enter orbit around Jupiter arriving in 1995 and studying it until 2003 During this period Galileo gathered a large amount of information about the Jovian system making close approaches to all of the Galilean moons and finding evidence for thin atmospheres on three of them as well as the possibility of liquid water beneath the surfaces of Europa Ganymede and Callisto It also discovered a magnetic field around Ganymede Then the Cassini probe to Saturn flew by Jupiter in 2000 and collected data on interactions of the Galilean moons with Jupiter s extended atmosphere The New Horizons spacecraft flew by Jupiter in 2007 and made improved measurements of its satellites orbital parameters In 2016 the Juno spacecraft imaged the Galilean moons from above their orbital plane as it approached Jupiter orbit insertion creating a time lapse movie of their motion 73 With a mission extension Juno has since begun close flybys of the Galileans flying by Ganymede in 2021 followed by Europa and Io in 2022 It is planned to fly by Io again in late 2023 and once more in 2024 See also EditJupiter s moons in fiction Satellite system astronomy Notes Edit The most recently announced moons of Jupiter are S 2022 J 1 S 2022 J 2 and S 2022 J 3 published in MPECs 2023 D44 to 2023 D46 2 These add three more to the previous count of 92 from January 2023 bringing the total up to 95 3 For comparison the area of a sphere with diameter 250 km is about the area of Senegal and comparable to the area of Belarus Syria and Uruguay The area of a sphere with a diameter of 5 km is about the area of Guernsey and somewhat more than the area of San Marino But note that these smaller moons are not spherical Jupiter Mass of 1 8986 1027 kg Mass of Galilean moons 3 93 1023 kg 4 828 Label refers to the Roman numeral attributed to each moon in order of their naming Diameters with multiple entries such as 60 40 34 reflect that the body is not a perfect spheroid and that each of its dimensions has been measured well enough The only satellites with measured masses are Amalthea Himalia and the four Galilean moons The masses of the inner satellites are estimated by assuming a density similar to Amalthea s 0 86 g cm3 while the rest of the irregular satellites are estimated by assuming a spherical volume and a density of 1 g cm3 Periods with negative values are retrograde refers to group assignments that are not considered sure yet References Edit a b c d e Planetary Satellite Discovery Circumstances JPL Solar System Dynamics NASA 15 November 2021 Retrieved 7 January 2022 a b c MPEC 2023 D46 S 2022 J 3 Minor Planet 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1051 0004 6361 20052841 S2CID 2260100 a b Chown Marcus 7 March 2009 Cannibalistic Jupiter ate its early moons New Scientist Retrieved 18 March 2009 Lari Giacomo Saillenfest Melaine Fenucci Marco 2020 Long term evolution of the Galilean satellites the capture of Callisto into resonance Astronomy amp Astrophysics 639 A40 arXiv 2001 01106 Bibcode 2020A amp A 639A 40L doi 10 1051 0004 6361 202037445 S2CID 209862163 Retrieved 1 August 2022 a b Jewitt David Haghighipour Nader September 2007 Irregular Satellites of the Planets Products of Capture in the Early Solar System PDF Annual Review of Astronomy amp Astrophysics 45 1 261 295 arXiv astro ph 0703059 Bibcode 2007ARA amp A 45 261J doi 10 1146 annurev astro 44 051905 092459 S2CID 13282788 Xi Zezong Z February 1981 The Discovery of Jupiter s Satellite Made by Gan De 2000 years Before Galileo Acta Astrophysica Sinica 1 2 87 Bibcode 1981AcApS 1 85X Galilei Galileo 1989 Translated and prefaced by Albert Van Helden ed Sidereus Nuncius Chicago amp London University of Chicago Press pp 14 16 ISBN 0 226 27903 0 Van Helden Albert March 1974 The Telescope in the Seventeenth Century Isis The University of Chicago Press on behalf of The History of Science Society 65 1 38 58 doi 10 1086 351216 S2CID 224838258 Pasachoff Jay M May 2015 Simon Marius s Mundus Iovialis 400th Anniversary in Galileo s Shadow Journal for the History of Astronomy 46 2 218 234 Bibcode 2015JHA 46 218P doi 10 1177 0021828615585493 S2CID 120470649 Barnard E E October 1892 Discovery and Observation of a Fifth Satellite to Jupiter Astronomical Journal 12 275 81 85 Bibcode 1892AJ 12 81B doi 10 1086 101715 Campbell L 9 January 1905 Discovery of a Sixth Satellite of Jupiter Astronomical Journal 24 570 154 Bibcode 1905AJ 24S 154 doi 10 1086 103654 Perrine C D 30 March 1905 The Seventh Satellite of Jupiter Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific 17 101 62 63 Bibcode 1905PASP 17 56 doi 10 1086 121624 JSTOR 40691209 S2CID 250794880 Melotte P J March 1908 Note on the Newly Discovered Eighth Satellite of Jupiter Photographed at the Royal Observatory Greenwich Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 68 6 456 457 Bibcode 1908MNRAS 68 456 doi 10 1093 mnras 68 6 456 Nicholson S B October 1914 Discovery of the Ninth Satellite of Jupiter Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific 26 1 197 198 Bibcode 1914PASP 26 197N doi 10 1086 122336 PMC 1090718 PMID 16586574 Nicholson S B October 1938 Two New Satellites of Jupiter Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific 50 297 292 293 Bibcode 1938PASP 50 292N doi 10 1086 124963 S2CID 120216615 Nicholson S B December 1951 An unidentified object near Jupiter probably a new satellite Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific 63 375 297 299 Bibcode 1951PASP 63 297N doi 10 1086 126402 S2CID 121080345 Kowal C T Aksnes K Marsden B G Roemer E June 1975 Thirteenth satellite of Jupiter Astronomical Journal 80 460 464 Bibcode 1975AJ 80 460K doi 10 1086 111766 Marsden Brian G 3 October 1975 Probable New Satellite of Jupiter discovery telegram sent to the IAU IAU Circular Cambridge US Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory 2845 Retrieved 8 January 2011 Synnott S P November 1980 1979J2 The Discovery of a Previously Unknown Jovian Satellite Science 210 4471 786 788 Bibcode 1980Sci 210 786S doi 10 1126 science 210 4471 786 PMID 17739548 a b Press Information Sheet New Outer Satellite of Jupiter Discovered Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams 20 July 2000 Retrieved 6 January 2023 a b Nicholson P D Cuk M Sheppard S S Nesvorny D Johnson T V 2008 Irregular Satellites of the Giant Planets PDF In Barucci M A Boehnhardt H Cruikshank D P Morbidelli A eds The Solar System Beyond Neptune pp 411 424 Bibcode 2008ssbn book 411N ISBN 9780816527557 S2CID 32512508 a b c d e f g Sheppard Scott S Jewitt David C May 2003 An abundant population of small irregular satellites around Jupiter PDF Nature 423 6937 261 263 Bibcode 2003Natur 423 261S doi 10 1038 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S Williams Gareth V Tholen David J Trujillo Chadwick A Brozovic Marina Thirouin Audrey et al August 2018 New Jupiter Satellites and Moon Moon Collisions Research Notes of the American Astronomical Society 2 3 155 arXiv 1809 00700 Bibcode 2018RNAAS 2 155S doi 10 3847 2515 5172 aadd15 S2CID 55052745 155 Beatty J Kelly 6 June 2017 Two New Satellites for Jupiter Sky amp Telescope Retrieved 7 January 2023 Sheppard Scott S October 2018 Discovering 12 New Moons Around Jupiter PDF NOAO Newsletter NOIRLAb 118 9 10 Archived PDF from the original on 11 March 2021 Retrieved 7 January 2023 MPEC 2021 V333 S 2003 J 24 Minor Planet Electronic Circulars Minor Planet Center 15 November 2021 Retrieved 8 January 2023 Greenfieldboyce Nell 9 February 2023 Here s why Jupiter s tally of moons keeps going up and up Sky amp Telescope Retrieved 6 March 2023 a b Jones R Lynne Juric Mario Ivezic Zeljko January 2016 Asteroid Discovery and Characterization with the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope Proceedings of the 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K K Jia X Kivelson M G Nimmo F Schubert G Russell C T 12 May 2011 Evidence of a Global Magma Ocean in Io s Interior Science 332 6034 1186 1189 Bibcode 2011Sci 332 1186K doi 10 1126 science 1201425 PMID 21566160 S2CID 19389957 a b c d Grav Tommy Holman Matthew J Gladman Brett J Aksnes Kaare November 2003 Photometric survey of the irregular satellites Icarus 166 1 33 45 arXiv astro ph 0301016 Bibcode 2003Icar 166 33G doi 10 1016 j icarus 2003 07 005 S2CID 7793999 Sheppard Scott S Jewitt David C Porco Carolyn 2004 Jupiter s outer satellites and Trojans PDF In Fran Bagenal Timothy E Dowling William B McKinnon eds Jupiter The planet satellites and magnetosphere pp 263 280 ISBN 0 521 81808 7 Archived from the original PDF on 26 March 2009 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help a b c d e f g h i Planetary Satellite Mean Elements JPL Solar System Dynamics NASA Retrieved 28 March 2022 Note Orbital elements of regular satellites are with respect to the Laplace plane while orbital elements of irregular satellites are with respect to the ecliptic Nesvorny David Beauge Cristian Dones Luke March 2004 Collisional Origin of Families of Irregular Satellites PDF The Astronomical Journal 127 3 1768 1783 Bibcode 2004AJ 127 1768N doi 10 1086 382099 S2CID 27293848 a b Schilling Govert 8 September 2020 Study Suggests Jupiter Could Have 600 Moons Sky amp Telescope Retrieved 9 September 2020 Natural Satellites Ephemeris Service Minor Planet Center Retrieved 20 January 2023 Selection of Objects All Jovian outer irregular satellites Check I require Orbital Elements Get Information Planetary Satellite Physical Parameters Jet Propulsion Laboratory Retrieved 28 March 2022 Amalthea Merriam Webster Dictionary a b c d Siedelmann P K Abalakin V K Bursa M Davies M E et al 2000 The Planets and Satellites 2000 Report IAU IAG Working Group on Cartographic Coordinates and Rotational Elements of the Planets and Satellites Archived from the original on 12 May 2020 Retrieved 31 August 2008 Europa definition of Europa in English from the Oxford dictionary OxfordDictionaries com Archived from the original on 21 July 2012 Retrieved 20 January 2016 Ganymede definition of Ganymede in English from the Oxford dictionary OxfordDictionaries com Archived from the original on 14 March 2013 Retrieved 20 January 2016 Ganymede Merriam Webster Dictionary Fillius Walker McIlwain Carl Mogro Campero Antonio Steinberg Gerald 1976 Evidence that pitch angle scattering is an important loss mechanism for energetic electrons in the inner radiation belt of Jupiter Geophysical Research Letters 3 1 33 36 Bibcode 1976GeoRL 3 33F doi 10 1029 GL003i001p00033 ISSN 1944 8007 Juno Approach Movie of Jupiter and the Galilean Moons NASA July 2016External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Moons of Jupiter Scott S Sheppard Moons of Jupiter Scott S Sheppard The Jupiter Satellite and Moon Page Jupiter Moons by NASA s Solar System Exploration Archive of Jupiter System Articles in Planetary Science Research Discoveries Tilmann Denk Outer Moons of Jupiter Portals nbsp Stars nbsp Spaceflight nbsp Outer space nbsp Science Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Moons of Jupiter amp oldid 1177577940 Regular satellites, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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