npr: More than 400 years after Galileo Galilei discovered the first of Jupiter’s moons, astron
npr: More than 400 years after Galileo Galilei discovered the first of Jupiter’s moons, astronomers have found a dozen more — including one they’ve dubbed “oddball” — orbiting the planet. That brings the total number of Jovian moons to 79. The team of astronomers originally wasn’t even looking for the 12 new moons. Scott Sheppard of the Carnegie Institution for Science says he and his colleagues had been trying to track down a giant planet they think may be lurking at the outer reaches of our solar system. As part of that search, Sheppard was using the 4-meter Víctor Blanco Telescope in Chile in March of last year and realized that Jupiter was right near the part of the sky he wanted to search. “So we could also search for Jupiter moons while looking for things that are well beyond Pluto,” Sheppard says. Galileo Would Be Stunned: Jupiter Now Has 79 Moons Image by Roberto Molar Candanosa, courtesy of Carnegie Institution for Science -- source link