Skip to main content

Saturn takes the crown for planet with the most moons

You’ve heard about the race to get humans back to the moon via the Artemis program, but there’s another moon race going on in our solar system, with planets vying for the title of most moons. Previously, Jupiter was the champion with its 95 known moons, but in an unexpected development, Saturn has pulled into the lead thanks to the recent discovery of 62 new moons there.

Astronomers observed Saturn’s rings and their immediate vicinity using new techniques that can detect fainter moons, and with the new discoveries, Saturn now boasts an impressive 145 moons. As well as being the planet in our solar system with the highest number of moons, it’s also the first planet with more than 100 known moons.

Saturn during Equinox
Saturn during Equinox. NASA / JPL / Space Science Institute

It’s difficult to see many of Saturn’s moons because they are so small and dim compared to the planet. The latest batch of moons was identified from data collected by the Canada France Hawaii Telescope (CFHT) using a technique called shift and stack, in which a set of sequential images is stacked into one to track the movement of a moon, allowing researchers to see objects that would be too dim to observe in a single image. That let the researchers go from seeing a selection of dots, which could be asteroids or other objects, to tracking distinct moons.

Recommended Videos

“Tracking these moons makes me recall playing the kid’s game [connect the dots], because we have to connect the various appearances of these moons in our data with a viable orbit,” said lead researcher Edward Ashton of the University of British Columbia in a statement. “But with about 100 different games on the same page and you don’t know which dot belongs to which puzzle.”

This method was useful for identifying irregular moons, which are unlike regular moons as they have elliptical orbits. Previously, Saturn had 24 known regular moons and 58 known irregular moons, but the new research was able to more than double the number of irregular moons to 121.

As well as being a neat finding, the study of these irregular moons could help us to learn about how moons form. It is thought that the irregular moons formed in groups from collisions, as regular moons collided and splintered to form many smaller irregular moons.

“As one pushes to the limit of modern telescopes, we are finding increasing evidence that a moderate-sized moon orbiting backwards around Saturn was blown apart something like 100 million years ago,” said fellow researcher Brett Gladman.

Georgina Torbet
Georgina has been the space writer at Digital Trends space writer for six years, covering human space exploration, planetary…
The moon looks majestic in ISS astronaut’s stunning photo
The moon as seen from the space station.

NASA astronaut Matthew Dominick has shared a stunning image that he took recently aboard the International Space Station (ISS).

The photograph shows a large-looking moon dominating the scene, which also includes clouds a couple of hundred miles below.

Read more
Another piece of NASA’s mega moon rocket ships out
Crews moved the cone-shaped launch vehicle stage adapter out of NASA Marshall’s Building 4708 to the agency’s Pegasus barge on August 21. The barge will ferry the adapter first to NASA’s Michoud Assembly Facility, where it will pick up additional SLS hardware for future Artemis missions, and then travel to NASA Kennedy. In Florida, teams with NASA’s Exploration Ground Systems will prepare the adapter for stacking and launch.

Even while NASA is struggling with Boeing's new crewed Starliner spacecraft, it is continuing work on another key piece of space infrastructure: its Space Launch System, or SLS rocket that is designed to carry astronauts to the moon and beyond. Parts of the new rocket are arriving at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, and now another key piece is on its ways: the launch vehicle stage adapter.

Standing at 322 feet tall when fully stacked, the SLS is NASA's most powerful rocket to date and has already been on a test flight around the moon as part of the Artemis I mission in 2022. Now, NASA is preparing for its first crewed flight using the rocket, which will be the Artemis II mission scheduled for September 2025. Unlike NASA's current woes with the Starliner spacecraft, which ferries astronauts between Earth and the International Space Station, the Artemis II mission will use a different spacecraft called the Orion.

Read more
Juice spacecraft slingshots around Earth and moon in world’s first maneuver
juice earth moon flyby waves goodbye once again pillars

The Juice spacecraft, a European Space Agency mission to visit the icy moons of Jupiter, has just made a world's first maneuver. This week, the craft swung back to Earth on its way to Jupiter and used both Earth and the moon's gravity to slingshot it onward, in the first lunar-Earth flyby.

When you think about spacecraft traveling to distant parts of the solar system, you might imagine them pointing directly toward their targets and traveling in a straight line. But that uses an awful lot of fuel, as the spacecraft needs to overcome the gravity of various bodies. It is much more efficient in terms of fuel usage to travel in a series of circular orbits, gradually adjusting course to move out in a spiral pattern with the sun at the center. This takes more time but less of the precious fuel that is so heavy to carry.

Read more