NASA Finds Neptune Moons Locked in ‘Dance of Avoidance’
November 18, 2019 | JPLEstimated reading time: 3 minutes
Even by the wild standards of the outer solar system, the strange orbits that carry Neptune's two innermost moons are unprecedented, according to newly published research.
Orbital dynamics experts are calling it a "dance of avoidance" performed by the tiny moons Naiad and Thalassa. The two are true partners, orbiting only about 1,150 miles (1,850 kilometers) apart. But they never get that close to each other; Naiad's orbit is tilted and perfectly timed. Every time it passes the slower-moving Thalassa, the two are about 2,200 miles (3,540 kilometers) apart.
An observer sitting on Thalassa would see Naiad in an orbit that varies wildly in a zigzag pattern, passing by twice from above and then twice from below.
In this perpetual choreography, Naiad swirls around the ice giant every seven hours, while Thalassa, on the outside track, takes seven and a half hours. An observer sitting on Thalassa would see Naiad in an orbit that varies wildly in a zigzag pattern, passing by twice from above and then twice from below. This up, up, down, down pattern repeats every time Naiad gains four laps on Thalassa.
Although the dance may appear odd, it keeps the orbits stable, researchers said.
“We refer to this repeating pattern as a resonance,” said Marina Brozovi, an expert in solar system dynamics at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, and the lead author of the new paper, which was published November 13 in Icarus. “There are many different types of “dances” that planets, moons and asteroids can follow, but this one has never been seen before.”
Far from the pull of the Sun, the giant planets of the outer solar system are the dominant sources of gravity, and collectively, they boast dozens upon dozens of moons. Some of those moons formed alongside their planets and never went anywhere; others were captured later, then locked into orbits dictated by their planets. Some orbit in the opposite direction their planets rotate; others swap orbits with each other as if to avoid collision.
Neptune has 14 confirmed moons. Neso, the farthest-flung of them, orbits in a wildly elliptical loop that carries it nearly 46 million miles (74 million kilometers) away from the planet and takes 27 years to complete.
Naiad and Thalassa are small and shaped like Tic Tacs, spanning only about 60 miles (100 kilometers) in length. They are two of Neptune's seven inner moons, part of a closely packed system that is interwoven with faint rings.
So how did they end up together—but apart? It's thought that the original satellite system was disrupted when Neptune captured its giant moon, Triton, and that these inner moons and rings formed from the leftover debris.
"We suspect that Naiad was kicked into its tilted orbit by an earlier interaction with one of Neptune's other inner moons," Brozovi said. "Only later, after its orbital tilt was established, could Naiad settle into this unusual resonance with Thalassa."
Brozovi and her colleagues discovered the unusual orbital pattern using analysis of observations by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope. The work also provides the first hint about the internal composition of Neptune's inner moons. Researchers used the observations to compute their mass and, thus, their densities, which were close to that of water ice.
“We are always excited to find these co-dependencies between moons,” said Mark Showalter, a planetary astronomer at the SETI Institute in Mountain View, California, and a co-author of the new paper. “Naiad and Thalassa have probably been locked together in this configuration for a very long time, because it makes their orbits more stable. They maintain the peace by never getting too close.”
The research is available to read and download here: https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.13612
Subscribe
Stay ahead of the technologies shaping the future of electronics with our latest newsletter, Advanced Electronics Packaging Digest. Get expert insights on advanced packaging, materials, and system-level innovation, delivered straight to your inbox.
Subscribe now to stay informed, competitive, and connected.
Suggested Items
Northrop Grumman Advances Improved Threat Detection System for US Army
05/07/2026 | Northrop GrummanNorthrop Grumman Corporation was awarded a U.S. Army contract for second phase development of its Improved Threat Detection System (ITDS).
Renesas Completes Acquisition of Irida Labs
05/07/2026 | RenesasRenesas Electronics Corporation, a premier supplier of advanced semiconductor solutions, announced that a subsidiary of Renesas has completed the acquisition of Irida Labs, a Greece-based company specializing in embedded software for AI-powered visual perception systems.
More Than Electrical Test: TTCI to Spotlight X-ray and CT Capabilities at SMTA Capital Expo
05/07/2026 | TTCIThe Training Connection LLC (TTC-LLC) will exhibit at the SMTA Capital Expo on Thursday, May 14 at the DoubleTree by Hilton Baltimore - BWI Airport.
Green Circuits Heads to Peterson SFB to Support Next-Gen Space and Defense Electronics
05/05/2026 | Green CircuitsThe event, hosted at Peterson Space Force Base, brings together key personnel and mission partners supporting critical U.S. defense and space operations.
ANELLO Photonics Raises $25M to Scale GPS-Denied Navigation Solutions
05/04/2026 | PRNewswireANELLO Photonics, the creator of the Silicon Photonics Optical Gyroscope (SiPhOG) and a leader in solid-state, high-precision inertial navigation systems, today announced it has secured an additional $25 million in a Series B-2 financing round.