DOES EARTH HAVE A SECOND MOON?
All About Space|Issue 125
There’s an asteroid tracking our planet’s orbit around the Sun, and astronomers have been surprised by its composition
David Crookes
DOES EARTH HAVE A SECOND MOON?
We all know that Earth only has one moon, and if you want proof of that, you just need to peer at the night sky. Can you see another? Astronomers are sticking to their guns by saying the Moon is Earth’s only natural satellite. Case closed… or so you’d think. In 2016, however, astronomers using the asteroid-hunting Pan-STARRS telescope in Hawaii discovered a rock orbiting the Sun while also repeatedly looping around Earth. Celestial objects such as these are called quasi-satellites, and while four others have been identified since 2004, this one was the closest and most stable ever seen.

What makes it particularly interesting is its potential origin, although a recent breakthrough has gone a long way towards clearing up the five-year mystery over what this object could be. The smart money is now on it actually being a fragment of our Moon. In that sense you could say it’s Earth’s second moon – as some have indeed dubbed it – though it’s not quite on that level, if truth be told. Still, it’s no less intriguing, and astronomers are keen to discover more.

One of the people leading studies into the object, which is being called Kamo‘oalewa – a Hawaiian name that roughly means ‘oscillating celestial fragment’ – is University of Arizona planetary sciences graduate student Ben Sharkey. For the past five years he has dedicated much of his time and energy into finding out the origin of the celestial body, with interest piquing following the recent publication of his team’s academic paper in the scientific journal Communications Earth & Environment.

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