Makemake_and_its_moon.jpg
Summary
Description Makemake and its moon.jpg |
English:
This Hubble Space Telescope image reveals the first moon ever discovered around the dwarf planet Makemake. The tiny moon, located just above Makemake in this image, is barely visible because it is almost lost in the glare of the very bright dwarf planet. The moon, nicknamed MK 2, is roughly 160 kilometres wide and orbits about 21,000 kilometres from Makemake. Makemake is 1,300 times brighter than its moon and is also much larger, at 2,200 kilometres across.
The Makemake system is more than 50 times farther than the Earth is from the Sun. The pair resides on the outskirts of our solar system in the Kuiper Belt, a vast region of frozen debris from the construction of our solar system 4.5 billion years ago. Previous searches for a moon around Makemake turned up empty. The moon may be in an edge-on orbit, so part of the time it gets lost in the bright glare of Makemake. Hubble's sharp-eyed Wide Field Camera 3 made the observation in April 2015. |
Date | |
Source | http://www.spacetelescope.org/images/opo1618b/ |
Author | NASA, ESA, and A. Parker and M. Buie (Southwest Research Institute) |
Licensing
|
ESA/Hubble images, videos and web texts are released by the
ESA
under the
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license
and may on a non-exclusive basis be reproduced without fee provided they are clearly and visibly credited. Detailed conditions are below; see the
ESA copyright statement
for full information.
For images created by NASA or on the hubblesite.org website, or for ESA/Hubble images on the esahubble.org site before 2009, use the
{{PD-Hubble}}
tag.
Conditions
:
Notes :
|
This file is licensed under the
Creative Commons
Attribution 4.0 International
license.
Attribution:
ESA/Hubble
-
You are free:
- to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work
- to remix – to adapt the work
-
Under the following conditions:
- attribution – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use.