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Hundreds of new moons are revealing our solar system's violent history

The outer solar system once seemed like a quiet backwater. But a glut of tiny, strange moons with unruly orbits are coming into view, revealing hints of a surprising past 鈥 and the origin of Saturn's rings

By Jonathan O鈥機allaghan

10 June 2026

A spherical rocky body being destroyed in a collision.

Shutterstock/Johan Swanepoel

In the far reaches of the solar system, the planetary neighbourhood seems quiet. Beyond Jupiter, the sun is no longer a blazing disc, but a cold, white lamp. The planets are separated by gulfs of darkness. Light takes just 8 minutes to get from the sun to Earth, but typically more than an hour to cross the yawning chasm between Uranus and Neptune.

But in the middle of听what seems like an uneventful听part of the solar system, astronomers recently made a听mammoth听discovery:听a hidden population of听more than 100听moons that, until recently, remained almost invisible. From Earth, they appear as faint, fast-moving points of light, easily lost in their planets鈥 glare.

They aren鈥檛 moons as we imagine them 鈥 grand worlds like our own pale satellite, Jupiter鈥檚 volcanic Io or Saturn鈥檚 haze-wrapped Titan. They are smaller, darker and far more unruly. Astronomers call them irregular moons, and with their numbers now so high, their hidden kingdom has become harder to ignore. 鈥淲e have had this huge influx in the last year, [including an]鈥痚ye鈥痮pener at Saturn,鈥濃痵ays 听at NASA鈥檚 Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California.

But it鈥檚 not just the discovery of these moons that has astronomers excited. For one thing, they may hint that the outer part of our solar system might not be enjoying a quiet retirement, but instead has seen periods of incredible turbulence surprisingly recently. For another, these hidden moons may help us solve a mystery about one of our solar system鈥檚 most iconic sights: how did Saturn get its rings?

The discovery of hidden moons

What is a moon, exactly?听If you looked up at our night sky听you鈥檇听see our own natural satellite,听more than听3400听kilometres across, keeping stately company with听Earth. Many of the solar system鈥檚 other moons fit that picture,听too:听big, round worlds听circling听close听to their听host听planet,听usually moving with that听planet鈥檚 spin.

But there is another kind of moon.听These are small, misshapen things, often only听a few kilometres听wide,听following听distant, tilted and sometimes backwards paths.听These are irregular moons听and,听for a long time, they were easy to overlook.

One of the first irregular moons to be recognised was Phoebe around Saturn in 1898, the largest of the planet’s irregular moons at 213 km across. It was the herald of many more to come. As telescopes and digital cameras improved, especially from the early 2000s, astronomers began seeing smaller and smaller irregular moons around giant planets in droves. Then came last year鈥檚 deluge. In 2025, 听around Saturn alone,听pushing the known total听of听solar system听moons听above 450.

For astronomer听 at the Carnegie Institution for Science in Washington DC, who has helped lead many of these searches, the broad pattern didn鈥檛 come as a surprise. Astronomers were always sure there were more moons to be found around the gas giants, he says; telescopes just couldn鈥檛 pick up such faint signals until recently.

Saturn's impact-pummeled Hyperion

Despite being one of Saturn’s largest moons, Hyperion has a strange non-spherical shape and an unruly orbit

NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

Still, the scale of discoveries last year caught many off guard. 鈥淓verybody was surprised,鈥 says Brozovic. Astronomers had expected maybe a few dozen more moons to be found around these outer planets, but instead hundreds or even thousands are now thought to be awaiting discovery. 鈥淚t really is starting to be pretty busy out there in the solar system,鈥 says Brozovic.

These moons might be small, but their implications are large. Their oddly elongated orbits suggest that they didn鈥檛 form in the same place as their host planets, the way larger moons did. Many also travel in loose families, following similar paths around their planet 鈥撯痑 pattern that seems to suggest they are the fragments of larger parent moons hundreds of kilometres across that broke apart in collisions long ago.

Thanks to these irregular moons, astronomers now think they can reconstruct this violent history and its role in shaping the solar system, says at the University of Southern Queensland, Australia. 鈥淭hey are relics of the solar system鈥檚 formation,鈥 he says.

A recent and chaotic history

To reconstruct this history, we need to first ask a pivotal question: how exactly did these irregular moons end up around these gas giants? For decades, astronomers thought the answer lay in the solar system鈥檚 first flush of youth, because there just isn鈥檛 an easy way for a planet to capture a passing object in the settled solar system we see today, says Sheppard. A comet or asteroid can wander briefly into a planet鈥檚 gravitational grip, but unless something slows it down, it would simply fly out again. 鈥淭he only way to capture a moon is to dissipate energy from its orbit,鈥 he says.

However, soon after the birth of our solar system 鈥 about 4.5 billion years ago 鈥 there were several possible mechanisms of capture. One involved , which were more swollen and extended back then. Asteroids or comets flying through them could have been slowed enough to be we see today. But while that works for smaller bodies, it struggles to explain how planets captured the suspected parent bodies of irregular moons, which were later smashed apart.

A more promising avenue听for that听is听the听Nice听model, the most accepted picture of solar system evolution.听It says Jupiter, Saturn,听Uranus听and Neptune听didn鈥檛听originally form听where听we see them now. They were packed much closer together when the solar system first took shape, before gravitational interactions sent them migrating outward. Their combined gravitational interactions during their migration could also have helped , including听the larger progenitors of the irregular moons we see today.

This would help explain听why听today鈥檚 irregular moons听don鈥檛听seem to have a common origin, instead resembling a cosmic jumble听from across the solar system, according to听听听last year听that used听observations from听the James Webb Space Telescope.

The chaotic nature of this early period was thought to also be when some of the once-larger irregular moons might have crashed together, creating the much smaller objects around the planets we see today.

But then came a puzzling discovery in 2025. A team led by听 at Academia Sinica in Taiwan took a closer look at ,听a clutch of some听100听newly discovered听small moons听looping around Saturn.

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At first glance, this听strange family looks like the debris trail of some ancient cosmic smash-up.听But when Ashton鈥檚 team modelled听their听sizes, that timing听didn鈥檛听quite add up. If these fragments had been circling Saturn since the early days of the solar system, many of the smaller moons should have fallen into the planet by now, tugged inward by its gravity.

Instead, Ashton鈥檚 team argued that the Mundilfari group may have formed in a collision just听100 million years ago.听鈥淸That might mean] these collisional processes are still alive and well,鈥 says Brozovic.听If these听collisions really were surprisingly recent, that would suggest the outer solar system is still being听dramatically reshaped today,听long after the main drama of planet formation was thought to be over.

Such听collisions could听be linked to other events, too.听Ashton鈥檚 paper was published in听December 2025, and听piqued the interest of听听at the听University of California, Santa Cruz, because听the age of the Mundilfari group seems suspiciously close to another number:听the suspected age of Saturn鈥檚 rings. Could the two be related?

The mystery of Saturn鈥檚 rings

For all their fame, Saturn鈥檚 rings听remain听oddly hard to explain. We have seen them through telescopes for more than 400 years, yet听the听most important mystery lingers:听how did they form?听For a long time, Saturn鈥檚 rings looked like an ancient ornament,听a bright, almost permanent fixture that had circled the planet since the solar system鈥檚 youth. The simplest story was that they formed early,听perhaps from听leftover material around Saturn or from a moon听that听shattered billions of years ago.

Then measurements from NASA鈥檚 Cassini mission complicated things. In its final months, before it plunged into Saturn in 2017, the spacecraft repeatedly threaded the narrow gap between the planet and its rings. Those dives revealed rings that were surprisingly low in mass and remarkably clean. That was hard to square with great age: over billions of years, micrometeoroids should have darkened the ice and worn the system down. Instead, photos taken by Cassini made the rings look suspiciously fresh 鈥 perhaps only a few hundred million years old. That leaves a difficult question: what could have made them so recently?

The new moons may offer a way in. We already know that irregular moons can make a mess as they collide into each other or are struck by passing comets and asteroids. They can explode into clouds of dust that gradually fall towards their host planet. We already see evidence for this on Saturn鈥檚 moon Iapetus, the outermost of the planet’s regular moons, which has a strange, two-toned colouration. Its leading side 鈥撯痶he face that ploughs forward through space 鈥 is extremely dark, while the trailing side is nice and bright. Sheppard says that Iapetus could be running through the reddish, carbon-rich dust shed by irregular moons 鈥渓ike a bulldozer鈥.

Saturn's moon Iapetus

Saturn has a striking two-toned moon called Iapetus. One face is covered in dark, reddish dust

NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

Still, those distant,听irregular moons of Saturn听weren鈥檛听thought to have much to do with听the planet鈥檚 rings. But听in听April, Jiao and his team听听suggesting a potential link.听They听first听built on the idea听that听Saturn once had an extra听icy听moon about 1000 km听across, called Chrysalis. Over the听4.5-billion-year听history of the solar system,听it听fell into a gravitational rhythm with Titan, Saturn鈥檚 largest moon. The mutual tug between both听elongated Chrysalis鈥檚听orbit from听a听circular听shape听into an听ellipse.

Then, about听, the moon鈥檚听distorted听orbit听carried it听past a threshold听around Saturn known as the Roche limit,听the boundary听within听which a planet鈥檚 gravity can tear a moon apart.听In one catastrophic pass, Saturn stripped away much of Chrysalis鈥檚 ice,听almost instantly听shrinking the moon to half its size.

What听would have happened next is uncertain.听The rocky core of Chrysalis听may have been cannibalised听by Saturn or ejected entirely, although Jiao notes we 鈥渉aven鈥檛 found such a body鈥 orbiting the听sun听somewhere else. The ice, meanwhile, would have听spread听like butter, forming a broad, bright听disc听over听a听few thousand years听鈥 Saturn鈥檚 rings.

The rings of Saturn, taken by Voyager 2 in 1981

The origin of Saturn’s rings continues to be one of the enduring mysteries of the solar system

Smith Archive/Alamy

But听not all the debris听would have听stayed close in. Some chunks听could have been flung into听Saturn鈥檚 outer reaches, where one piece struck another moon and shattered it, forming the听Mundilfari group of irregular moons听at the same time.听If so, Saturn鈥檚 rings and some of its hidden moons may be two remnants of the same lost world, both formed about 100 million years ago.

鈥淚t is hard to imagine that all of these events occurred at the same time by coincidence,鈥 says Jiao.听鈥淚 am quite excited about the possibility of linking the lost moon Chrysalis with the irregular satellite population.鈥

While the timing adds up,听there is some听scepticism.听鈥淚t鈥檚 definitely a very cool study showing one way that the rings might have formed,鈥 says Horner. But he cautions听that linking听the听destruction of Chrysalis听to the formation of the听Mundilfari听irregular moons听would require more evidence, such as听impact scars on听Saturn鈥檚 other听regular moons, which might also have been struck听鈥 something a future mission might be able to look for.

听at the University of British Columbia in Canada听is听also听intrigued by the idea,听although听similarly听not completely convinced.听鈥淚t鈥檚 certainly curious听that these two wildly disparate events come out to be the same age,听but that doesn鈥檛 necessarily mean they have a causal connection,鈥澨齢e says.

Jiao says that further modelling听will be needed to test whether his idea is right.听But听Saturn鈥檚 rings may be just one example听where irregular moons听are听yielding听fresh answers to old solar system puzzles. The next surprises may听lie even further from the听sun.

Hidden kingdoms

For a long time, astronomers expected Jupiter to be the solar system鈥檚 great collector of irregular moons. It is the largest planet by far, with the strongest gravitational pull, so it seemed natural that it would have the biggest satellite system. But last year鈥檚 discoveries put Saturn ahead, with 274 known moons compared with Jupiter鈥檚 115. That is surprising enough. But there is reason to question whether the solar system鈥檚 other two outer planets may have even more.

As far as we know, Uranus and Neptune have far fewer moons 鈥 29 and 16, respectively 鈥 but that may say more about the limits of our surveys than about what is really there. Both are distant, dim targets. Yet their position could make them rich hunting grounds. Their distance from the sun gives them vast regions of gravitational influence, known as Hill spheres, in which small bodies can remain bound; Neptune鈥檚 stretches some 115 million km, almost twice Saturn鈥檚. Their proximity to the Kuiper Belt, a reservoir of icy debris, may also have given them plenty of material to capture. 鈥淚 fully expect that someday, a couple of decades away, we will find thousands of these objects at Uranus and Neptune,鈥 says at the Southwest Research Institute in the US.

If Uranus and Neptune听end up on top of听the听league table, that could reveal how efficiently the ice giants gathered material听from their surroundings. If they听don鈥檛, that absence would be just as telling, hinting that something stripped those systems bare or prevented captures in the first place.

And we may soon even have a chance to see an irregular moon up close, the second time a spacecraft has ever visited an irregular moon after Cassini鈥檚 brief visit to Saturn鈥檚 satellite Phoebe in 2004. at the German Aerospace Center says the European Space Agency is considering whether to adjust the path of its Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer spacecraft so that it passes close to Kallichore, one of Jupiter鈥檚 tiny irregular moons, in 2031. It would be a fleeting encounter with one of these small, dark objects, but a worthwhile one. These overlooked moons may be among the best records we have of how the giant planets came to be.

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