Jupiter Reclaims Title of Planet With the Most Moons [View all]
After the discovery of 12 new moons, the gas giant now has 92 known natural satellitesand scientists expect to find more
Will Sullivan
February 8, 2023

An enhanced-contrast image of Jupiter and its moon Ganymede taken by NASA's Cassini spacecraft in 2000. NASA / JPL / University of Arizona
Astronomers discovered 12 additional moons of Jupiter, raising its total number of known natural satellites to 92. The gas giant now holds the record for the most known moons of any planet in the solar systemfor the time being, at least.
Saturn is the current runner-up with 83 known moons, and prior to this discovery, it had been the reigning leader for moon count since 2019. But if scientists could detect all moons at least three kilometers wide, Saturn would have more moons than all the rest of the solar system, Brett Gladman, an astronomer at the University of British Columbia in Canada who was not involved in the recent discoveries, says to Sky & Telescopes Jeff Hecht.
Sometimes called the king of planets, Jupiter is more than twice as massive as the rest of planets combined. While people have known of Jupiters existence for at least a couple thousand years, the first detailed observations of the fifth-closest planet to the sun are credited to Galileo Galilei in 1610. He also discovered four of Jupiters moons at this time.
Over the next 400-odd years, further observations increased that tally to 80 known moons. Then, astronomers spotted these 12 additional candidates using telescopes in Hawaii and Chile in 2021 and 2022.
More:
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/jupiter-reclaims-title-of-planet-with-the-most-moons-180981585/