Earth has caught a 'second moon'

41 pointsposted a year ago
by divbzero

37 Comments

ravenstine

a year ago

I'd hardly call a 37 foot object that wont even make a complete orbit a "second moon."

brutal_chaos_

a year ago

FTA: "You may say that if a true satellite is like a customer buying goods inside a store, objects like 2024 PT5 are window shoppers."

The article agrees with you. It's always those pesky headlines.

RandomCitizen12

a year ago

How can it be called a 'capture' when it's already known when and how it will leave. That's like calling a resort vacation stay a kidnapping.

enragedcacti

a year ago

I had the same confusion so here's my layman's understanding. They are defining capture/orbit as having negative "geocentric energy" which is a term of art no one else seems to use but I think is just a mathematical representation of the following:

> a temporary satellite is any body that enters the Hill sphere of a planet at a sufficiently low velocity such that it becomes gravitationally bound to the planet for some period of time. [1]

again stretching my understanding too far, I think this basically means that in the absence of other celestial bodies the satellite would be in a stable orbit, but that in reality after some time it gets far enough away that the sun's gravitational pull dominates and stops it from making a full orbit.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temporary_satellite

timjver

a year ago

> in the absence of other celestial bodies the satellite would be in a stable orbit

Presumably entering such an orbit is only possible due to forces from other celestial bodies in the first place, since otherwise if you reversed time it would spontaneously leave its orbit. In other words, the act of the earth "capturing" the object is ultimately performed by external forces?

pengaru

a year ago

Technically The Moon is slowly leaving earth's orbit too, to the tune of 38mm per year[0]. Everything's temporary...

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orbit_of_the_Moon

mjevans

a year ago

That's like calling a lifetime lived within just one village 'temporary'. On the scale of human events it's nearly as permanent as anything else for which we commonly ascribe permanence and reliability within lifetime scales.

runako

a year ago

It's fair to describe objects in relation to the lifespans of those objects, not of those who observe. "On the scale of human events" is not the only relevant timeframe for discussing celestial bodies.

jumploops

a year ago

Goodbye Moon would be a great name for a children’s book focused on space and time!

deafpolygon

a year ago

Any impact on tidal activity?

nso

a year ago

Like measurable in our lifetime? The average distance to the moon will be 3.8 meters further away in a hundred years. That's insignificant as far as tides goes.

Despite what another commenter says, the moon will not leave earths captive field. It will recede until it gets tidally locked with earth, and both the tide cycles and the moons recension will halt. That is, if there still is water in a few billion years and it hasn't been replaced with Brawndo

flqn

a year ago

Is the moon not already tidally locked? The same hemisphere of it always faces the earth. Is there a different kind of tidal locking or orbital resonance it will settle into?

alfiopuglisi

a year ago

It goes on until an Earth's day is as long as a month. Both will face each other in a fixed way. But it takes many billions of years and the Sun will burn both to a cinder much before that.

ck2

a year ago

the way I remember that fact is it is also average fingernail growth per year

bongodongobob

a year ago

Because during that time from its frame of reference it will be falling around the earth until it reaches escape velocity and starts falling around the sun again.

hansvm

a year ago

To be fair, it's still kidnapping in most states even if the duration is very short.

tboyd47

a year ago

> Marcos explained, "Asteroid 2024 PT5 will not describe a full orbit around Earth. You may say that if a true satellite is like a customer buying goods inside a store, objects like 2024 PT5 are window shoppers."

Is it a NASA thing to deploy outrageously absurd analogies for no apparent reason? Is there a checkout desk for space objects?

MisterTea

a year ago

It's not absurd, you're reading too far into it.

ravenstine

a year ago

Yes, I'm not sure why they chose that analogy. It just sounds cutesy and doesn't really add anything.

7373737373

a year ago

I wish spaceflight was sufficiently commoditized that sending a satellite there to get some pictures would be trivial

qwertox

a year ago

Which website/software/app is good for tracking the location of 2024 PT5, so that it can be found in the local night sky?

lxgr

a year ago

> While the moon is an estimated 2,159 miles (3,475 km) in diameter [...]

Is the article implying that we don't know the Moon's (I assume they're referring to the capital-M one) diameter to at least kilometer-precision...?

mattficke

a year ago

It’s an irregularly shaped body so there’s not one single radius. Mean radius is always going to be an approximation (even for Earth); the mean radius of the Moon is 1,737.4 km.

lxgr

a year ago

But it's still an approximation, not an estimate, right? (The fact that you can list the mean radius with sub-decimal precision suggests as much.)

To me, an estimate suggests that there's error bars; an approximation suggests that there's variance that we can quantify (or at least we're very confident about our error bars).

feoren

a year ago

There are error bars on absolutely everything that we ever measure.

lxgr

a year ago

Sorry, missed a "large". It would sound pretty strange to me to claim that the distance between New York and London is "an estimated x kilometers" (with single-kilometer precision), even though there is tectonic movement etc.

aryan14

a year ago

Didn’t know we were referring to asteroids as moons now

EarlKing

a year ago

The Jovian satellites would like to have a word with you.

Also, Earth already has a second moon: 3753 Cruithne.