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Surprise: Earth Probably Has Two Moons

Posted: 01/18/12 12:17 PM ET

As residents of Earth, we've grown accustomed to having just one moon. Let Saturn and its 62 moons be the solar system's showboat; that just leaves us on this planet to enjoy our single natural satellite all the more.

Or so we thought. According to a new study by an international team of scientists, the Earth actually has two moons at any given time. One is the big bright orb we all know.

The other is an asteroid, about the size of a refrigerator, that gets caught in Earth's gravitational pull as it's whizzing through space. One such Near Earth Object (NEO), asteroid 2006 RH120, served as Earth's second moon for a full year, from July 2006 through July 2007, before spinning off into the void.

"We predict that there is a one-meter-diameter or larger NEO temporarily orbiting the Earth at any given time," according to the research paper, published recently in Icarus, a journal of solar system studies.

Right now is a very good time for Earth to find a new mate. The likelihood of capturing a new, tiny moon is highest in January, the scientists found, when the Earth is 146 million kilometers from the sun, the closest point in its orbit. Another good time is in July, the Earth's farthest point in its solar orbit, when we are 150 million kilometers from the sun.

Once captured by the Earth's gravitational pull, these "temporary moons" usually enjoy three highly elliptical passes around the planet, which takes them about nine months. But some moons probably stick around for years in more stable orbits, the researchers predict. If scientists could find such a stable temporary moon, the scientists hypothesize, a space agency might be able to send a rocket to meet the asteroid, and lasso it back down to Earth.

"The scientific potential of being able to first remotely characterize a meteoroid and then visit and bring it back to Earth would be unprecedented," wrote the research team, which includes Mikael Granvik of the University of Hawaii and Jeremie Vaubaillon from the University of Helsinki.

To land on an asteroid and safely bring it down to Earth, first NASA would have to find one, and that can be tricky. Most temporary moons are too tiny and moving too fast to be detected, according to the study. They're also too far away, usually staying two or three times farther away from the planet than our larger, more famous moon.

The one confirmed temporary moon, RH120, may have been detected by the Catalina Sky Survey in Arizona because it was larger than most, at approximately 10 to 20 feet wide.

 
 
 
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12:48 PM on 01/31/2012
We have literally thousands if you want to call one meter a moon. Articficial satellites, Rocket stages and assorted other space junk.
07:42 PM on 01/29/2012
Explains why my fat freeloading friends are always orbiting my fridge.
10:29 AM on 01/24/2012
We have the "Moon" now Rh120, this is not sexy, come on people we need a sexy satellite, for example: Alba-cerise or Tantalus.
10:15 AM on 01/24/2012
my cat Penelope is so fat, she has 7 of her own moons. Consisting mostly of kitty hair and mice dander....
08:05 AM on 01/24/2012
It's all in your definition of 'moon'. Kind of like the definition of planet. But the title sucked me in...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MissFrijole
My bite is worse than my bark.
09:21 AM on 02/01/2012
Speaking of defining planets: if they want to call a piece of rock a moon, that is only 20 feet wide, why can't they let Pluto stay a planet? It's way bigger than that!
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Anybodyseenthepopos
Like you Really give a rats...
01:56 PM on 01/23/2012
If there's no beer in that fridge I'm not interested!
apiazza
There is no such thing as a fiscal conservative.
11:57 AM on 01/22/2012
I wonder if Sarah Palin can see the 2nd moon from her house?
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05:00 PM on 01/21/2012
I think I read an article somewhere that at times the Earth even has three moons.

Seems to me that more study needs to be done on this subject. How often do these minor moons have their orbits altered in such a way that they end up impacting either Earth or the much larger, commonly known "Moon"?
09:52 AM on 01/21/2012
Pluto ain't a planet but a fridge is a moon? Solar System is not what it was.
anfractuous
Now I educates'm my way.
02:43 PM on 01/20/2012
What about at the Lagrange points, although, how could a natural object energetically get to one and then manage to slow down and stay there?
anfractuous
Now I educates'm my way.
02:27 PM on 01/20/2012
Reminds me of a science fiction story I read years ago where a newly discovered third moon of Mars is a superdense sphere orbiting just feet off the surface.
12:33 PM on 01/22/2012
I remember that srory.....it passed through rocks and hillsides leaving a hole evertwhere it went!
anfractuous
Now I educates'm my way.
09:38 AM on 01/23/2012
Yep, that's it!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MissFrijole
My bite is worse than my bark.
09:22 AM on 02/01/2012
How would that be possible? Wouldn't the gravitational pull throw everything out of order?
bklynsparrow
creating reality from unreal things
10:28 AM on 01/20/2012
We're Tattooine?
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SonOfUgh
Your micro-bio is empty
01:11 PM on 01/20/2012
I think Tattooine had two suns. I'm not sure C3PO ever gave a dissertation on the number of moons orbiting that rural backwater of some remote galaxy, far far away.
bklynsparrow
creating reality from unreal things
01:17 PM on 01/20/2012
I seem to remember a scene with two moons but you could be right. May the force be with you :)
TomMartin
Freedom and equality.
01:44 AM on 01/20/2012
Back down to earth? As if the asteroid originated on the earth.
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01:25 PM on 01/20/2012
Well the guys towing it would have.
TomMartin
Freedom and equality.
02:49 PM on 01/20/2012
That would be a funny use of the word back, the context seems to imply the asteroid would go back to earth, but you understood it as the astronauts getting the asteroid and going back. So I guess you understood better what they tried to say in their clumsy way.
11:30 PM on 01/19/2012
You should check out 2010 TK 7. I think it qualifies as a temporary moon.
04:34 PM on 01/19/2012
Really? You are calling a refrigerator-sized asteroid a "moon?"

While there is no specific astronomical definition of the term moon, no one anyone thinks a refrigerator-sized body is a moon.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Daniel Myers
Then man created god in his image.
04:49 PM on 01/21/2012
Call it what you want it's bigger than my moon. More interesting to study too.
12:43 PM on 01/22/2012
Our moon is a natural satellite and everything we've put into orbit is an artificial satellite....therefore anything that orbits the earth at any given time is actually considered a moon regardless of its size....so by that standard the space shuttle and the ISS along with their crews would be moons of the earth as long as they are in orbit!