Also known as List of Neptune's moons
natural satellites of the planet Neptune
Neptune has 14 known moons, which are natural satellites that orbit the planet in space. These moons are scientifically important because studying them helps us understand the Neptune system and the formation of planets in our solar system.
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An annotated near-infrared image of some of Neptune's moons as captured by the James Webb Space Telescope in September 2022. There are 16 known moons of the planet Neptune, fourteen of which are named after water deities and creatures in Greek mythology. The largest of them is Triton, discovered by William Lassell on 10 October 1846, 17 days after the discovery of Neptune itself. Over a century passed before the discovery of the second natural satellite, Nereid, in 1949, and another 40 years passed before Proteus, Neptune's second-largest moon, was discovered in 1989.
Triton is unique among moons of planetary mass in that its orbit is retrograde to Neptune's rotation and inclined relative to Neptune's equator, which suggests that it did not form in orbit around Neptune but was instead gravitationally captured by it. The next-largest satellite in the Solar System suspected to be captured, Saturn's moon Phoebe, has only 0.03% of Triton's mass. The capture of Triton, probably occurring some time after Neptune formed a satellite system, was a catastrophic event for Neptune's original satellites, disrupting their orbits so that they collided to form a rubble disc. Triton is massive enough to have achieved hydrostatic equilibrium and to retain a thin atmosphere capable of forming clouds and hazes.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).