Kordylewski cloud
The Kordylewski clouds, sometimes called the lunar libration clouds, are concentrations of dust that exist at the and Lagrangian points of the Earth–Moon system. They were first reported by Polish astronomer Kazimierz Kordylewski in 1961, who observed the clouds from the Tatra Mountains in former Czechoslovakia. The clouds are likely composed of trapped dust particles from the interplanetary dust cloud. Dust particles remain for decades, forming large, rapidly-evolving bands within the clouds. Eventually, perturbations from the Sun lead to their escape.
Following Kordylewski's discovery, inconsistent observations by other astronomers led to their existence becoming controversial. Attempts to observe the sparse clouds were complicated by their exceedingly dim nature, making them difficult to discriminate against gegenschein and atmospheric airglow even in very dark skies. Observations from the ground, air, and space reported both positive and negative detections, and a 1991–92 encounter from the Hiten spacecraft failed to find the clouds. In 2018, they were tentatively confirmed to exist by a team of Hungarian astronomers through polarimetry. Due to their elusiveness they are sometimes nicknamed ghost moons.
History
Following French astronomer Frédéric Petit's spurious report of a second moon of Earth in 1846, other astronomers began searching for potential undiscovered moons. Between 1953 and 1956, a team headed by Clyde Tombaugh planned to search for small natural satellites near the Moon's Lagrange pointsdynamically stable regions of spacebut were prevented by poor weather. In 1951, Polish astronomer Kazimierz Kordylewski began his own search for Trojan satellites at the lunar and Lagrange points. He was also unsuccessful, but in 1956 Josef Witkowski suggested to Kordylewski to instead search for faint, diffuse dust clouds.The clouds were first observed with the naked eye by Kordylewski in October 1956, at the Skalnaté pleso Observatory in the Tatra Mountains of former Czechoslovakia. Even with very dark skies, the clouds were difficult to observe. They appeared as slight brightenings near the lunar and points at least 2° in diameter and one to two magnitudes fainter than the brightest gegenschein. On 6 March and 6 April 1961, Kordylewski successfully photographed two distinct clouds at the lunar point from Kasprowy Wierch's summit observatory. The photographs were taken using a Jupiter 3 Leica camera, with an exposure time of 11 minutes on March and 12 minutes in April. Kordylewski photometrically analyzed the photographs and published his results in the journal Acta Astronomica in 1961, and an International Astronomical Union circular announced the clouds' discovery on 23 May of that year.
Subsequent observations and debate
Further attempts to detect the Kordylewski clouds were conflicting and controversial. Ground-based observations of the clouds are complicated by their exceedingly dim nature, making observations sensitive to weather, gegenschein, and airglow. Following Kordylewski's announcement on 1961, other professional and amateur astronomers attempted to observe the clouds, initially without success. On 4 January 1964, astronomer J. W. Simpson and his colleagues R. G. Miller and G. Gardner observed the Kordylewski cloud. Thence until 1967, the team took about 100 photographs of the cloud. In 1966, NASA organized an airborn observations campaign, reporting detections of "circular or elliptical nebulous patches" at both Lagrange points on four flights. Other astronomers reported negative detections through optical or radar observations. From 1962 to 1963, an attempt by the United States Geological Survey to photograph the clouds from Chacaltaya, Bolivia gave inconclusive results. A photographic search for the cloud was conducted from March 1966 to March 1967 by astronomer Robert Roosen at the McDonald Observatory failed to find any clouds. Astronomers C. Wolff, L. Dundelman, and L. C. Haughney attempted to aerially photograph the clouds, flying well away from land over the Pacific Ocean to minimize light pollution. The team did not detect any clouds.Later observation attempts from space were conducted; space-based observations have the advantage of avoiding atmospheric airglow. In 1975, researcher J. R. Roach analyzed photographic data collected from 1969 to 1970 by the sixth Orbiting Solar Observatory telescope. The imagery was taken in green visible light, revealing clouds near both Lagrange points that appeared to librate around each point. A team of researchers led by R. H. Munro analyzed data taken by the coronograph aboard the Skylab space station, aiming to detect potential forward scattered sunlight by the clouds. No clouds could be distinguished against the solar coronal background. In 1991–1992, the Japanese Hiten spacecraft made single looping passes around the lunar and points, failing to detect the dust clouds with its dust counting instrument.
With mixed observational results, several astronomers expressed skepticism of the Kordylewski clouds' existence. In 1969, Roosen and Wolff published an article arguing against the existence of dust clouds within the Earth–Moon system, asserting on theoretical grounds that any such clouds would be unstable and destroyed by perturbations from the Sun or from the Moon's orbital eccentricity. Instead, they suggested that reported positive detections may be due to passing interplanetary dust clouds. In 1970, Naosuke Sekiguchi computed the behavior of dust, stating that dust tends to disperse from the lunar Lagrange points and suggested that positive detections may have been transient dispersing clouds. A similar analysis conducted by GP. Horedt, meanwhile, was inconclusive regarding dust behavior near the Lagrange points. Other astronomers suggested the possibility that the Kordylewski clouds quickly vary in structure over time as an explanation to conflicting ground observations. Successful reported observations of a cloud at the point are around three times more common than those for the point.
Current status
The Kordylewski clouds were tentatively confirmed in 2018 by a team of astronomers led by Judit Slíz-Balogh. The team first developed computer models to simulate the dynamical behavior of dust particles at the point, including predictions of what the simulated cloud would appear like in polarimetric observations from Earth. Polarimetric observations of the area around the point were then conducted over several months in 2017 at a private observatory in Badacsonytördemic, Hungary. As a control, the same region of sky was photographed when thin cirrus clouds and contrails passed overhead or when the point was not in view. Using a CCD camera with three linearly polarizing filters attached to its lens, the team successfully photographed features with polarization characteristics consistent with light scattered by dust clouds. When compared against the control photographs, the polarization characteristics differed from those expected of clouds, contrails, or zodiacal dust. Slíz-Balogh's team then compared their photographs of the clouds to their earlier computer models, finding that the photographed cloud structures matched predictions. The team published their confirmation of the clouds' existence in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society in 2018.A followup observation campaign was led by Slíz-Balogh on 31 October 2021 and 3 July 2022, targeting both the and points. Using the same methods and location as the 2017 observations, the and clouds were successfully photographed.
Properties
Structure and variability
The Kordylewski clouds are large and heterogeneous structures, with ground-based observations suggesting an apparent diameter of several degrees. The clouds have an elongated, denser "core" about 25,000 km in size and aligned parallel to the Moon's orbital plane. A diffuse series of dusty bands or blobs extend from the center perpendicular to the ecliptic plane, giving the clouds a striped appearance in polarized light. Simulations of the clouds suggest an asymmetry, with the cloud's core being denser than that of the cloud.Observations and modelling indicate that the Kordylewski clouds' structures change over time, and their structures and densities are influenced by the rate at which dust is trapped at the Lagrange points. Their structures vary over timescales as short as a few days, and they may be transient features. Modelling by Slíz-Balogh and collaborators indicate that the structure of the clouds is also controlled by different populations of trapped dust. Dust populations are trapped at different times and with different velocities, with populations older than 20–25 days forming bands. The evolution of these populations lead to bands appearing, disappearing, or changing in density. Modelling by Nathan R. Boone and Robert A. Battinger in 2021 demonstrated that the density of the clouds may also vary with respect to solar perturbations as it causes structures within the clouds to expand and collapse.
Dynamics and source
The Kordylewski clouds are located near the lunar and points, which are 60° ahead and behind the Moon along its orbit, respectively. The clouds are not centered exactly on the and points; ground observations have noted the clouds displaced by 6–10° or more away from those points.In the restricted three-body problem, the five Lagrange points represent points of equilibrium. Although points – are unstable, the and points are stable so long as the mass ratio of the primary and secondary is large enough: particles at these two points can become trapped. The mass ratio between the Earth and the Moon is great enough to ensure theoretical stability of the lunar and points. However, gravitational tides from the Sun and solar radiation pressure—relevant for dust particles—disrupt the stability of the lunar and points. Nevertheless, numerical simulations suggest that dust particles near these points are able to be temporarily captured into the Kordylewski clouds, potentially remaining for decades in small "islands of stability".
The Kordylewski clouds are likely supplied by dust from interplanetary space. The interplanetary dust cloud near Earth is quite homogeneous; despite this, models result in the cloud trapping up to 9% more dust than the cloud. This modelled asymmetry is similar to asymmetries in other trojan populations, such as between the two Jupiter trojan asteroid camps, but its exact cause is still unknown. Captured dust populations are initially evenly distributed within the clouds, forming bands after 20–25 days. Mean-motion resonances with the Moon may contribute to the formation of the bands. After becoming destabilized, dust particles then escape from the Earth–Moon system back into interplanetary space.