Jason Major
Universe Today
Wed, 11 Jul 2012 14:42 CDT

© NASA, ESA and M. Showalter (SETI Institute)
This just in! Astronomers working with the Hubble Space Telescope have spotted
a new moon around distant Pluto, bringing the known count up to 5. The image above was released by NASA just minutes ago, showing the Pluto system with its newest member, P5.
This news comes just a couple of weeks shy of the one-year anniversary of the
announcement of Pluto's 4th known moon, still currently named "P4″.
The news was shared this morning by an undoubtedly excited Alan Stern of the Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) on
Twitter.
Astronomers estimate P5 to be between 6 and 15 miles (9.6 to 24 km) in diameter. It orbits Pluto in the same plane as the other moons - Charon, Nix, Hydra and P4.
"The moons form a series of neatly nested orbits, a bit like Russian dolls," said team lead Mark Showalter of the SETI Institute.
A mini-abstract of an upcoming paper lists image sets acquired on 5 separate occasions in June and July. According to the abstract, P5 is 4% as bright as Nix and 50% as bright as P4.

© NASA, ESA and M. Showalter (SETI Institute)
The satellite's mean magnitude is V = 27.0 +/- 0.3, making it 4 percent as bright as Pluto II (Nix) and half as bright as S/2011 (134340) 1. The diameter depends on the assumed geometric albedo: 10 km if p_v = 0.35, or 25 km if p_v =0.04. The motion is consistent with a body traveling on a near-circular orbit coplanar with the other satellites. The inferred mean motion is 17.8 +/- 0.1 degrees per day (P = 20.2 +/- 0.1 days), and the projected radial distance from Pluto is 42000 +/- 2000 km, placing P5 interior to Pluto II (Nix) and close to the 1:3 mean motion resonance with Pluto I (Charon).
The new detection will help scientists navigate NASA's
New Horizons spacecraft through the Pluto system in 2015, when it makes an historic and long-awaited high-speed flyby of the distant world.
See the news release from NASA
here.
(H/T to Ray Sanders at
DearAstronomer.com)
Alas, poor Pluto, having been stripped of the title of Planet by the IAU, is now a system with at least 5 moons.
In 3 years, we will finally get to see what is on the surface of this 'demoted Planet'.
There is the decision of what to do with New Horizons probe once it is done with Pluto. NASA and affiliates are currently scanning for a Kuiper Belt Object to target after flyby. None have yet been found, and it's a problem because such objects are extremely faint and against a backdrop of the thickest part of the Milky Way. Needle in a haystack.
What to do?
Keep going, in hopes of encountering a KBO, or go after Makemake, Orcus or Eris?
Hindsight being 100%, what NASA really needed was about a dozen New Horizons to explore the ever-increasing known population of "poor Plutos's"
Drat and double-drat !!