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Media Advisory | Jan. 15, 2003

UBC Professor Helps Discover New Moons of Neptune

UBC Assoc. Prof. Brett Gladman is one of an international team of astronomers who have discovered three previously unknown moons of Neptune using an innovative technique.

These moons are the first to be discovered orbiting the gas giant since the Voyager II flyby in 1989, and the first discovered from a ground-based telescope since 1949. The find boosts the number of known satellites of Neptune to 11.

The new satellites were a challenge to detect because they are only about 30-40 kms (18-24 miles) in size. Their small size and distance from the Sun prevent the satellites from shining any brighter than 25th magnitude, about 100 million times fainter than can be seen with the unaided eye.

To locate the new moons, the team, lead by Matthew Holman of the Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics and J.J. Kavelaars of the National Research Council of Canada, utilized an innovative technique. Using the 4.0-meter Blanco telescope at the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory, Chile, and the 3.6-meter Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope, Hawaii, they took multiple exposures of the sky surrounding Neptune.

After digitally tracking the motion of the planet as it moved across the sky, they then added many frames together to boost the signal of any faint objects. Since they tracked the planet's motion, stars showed up in the final combined image as streaks of light, while the moons accompanying the planet appeared as points of light.

Gladman's role in these discoveries has been in tracking these satellites as they orbited around the planet in the past 18 months.

"The tracking of these extremely faint objects is extremely difficult, but necessary for without many observations one cannot calculate their orbits around the planet in order to learn about their origin," says Gladman, a Canada Research Chair in Planetary Astronomy.

It now appears that each giant planet's irregular satellite population is the result of an ancient collision between a former moon and a passing comet or asteroid. The discovery of these moons has opened a window through which scientists can observe the conditions in the solar system at the time the planets were forming.

Additional information on the discovery and Prof. Gladman's work can be found at: www.astro.ubc.ca/people/gladman/nep2003.html

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Contact


Assoc. Prof. Brett Gladman
Dept. of Physics and Astronomy
Tel: 604.822.6244
E-mail: gladman@astro.ubc.ca
Website: www.astro.ubc.ca/people/gladman

Michelle Cook
UBC Public Affairs
Tel: 604.822.2048
E-mail: michelle.cook@ubc.ca

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Last reviewed 22-Sep-2006

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