Visual observations as seen through a
Meade LX200 telescope Chinese historian
Xi Zezong claimed that the earliest record of a Jovian moon (Ganymede or Callisto) was a note by Chinese astronomer
Gan De of an observation around 364 BC regarding a "reddish star". However, the first certain observations of Jupiter's satellites were those of
Galileo Galilei in 1609. By January 1610, he had sighted the four massive
Galilean moons with his 20×
magnification telescope, and he published his results in March 1610. Simon Marius had independently discovered the moons one day after Galileo, although he did not publish his book on the subject until 1614. Even so, the names Marius assigned are used today:
Ganymede,
Callisto,
Io, and
Europa. No additional satellites were discovered until
E. E. Barnard observed
Amalthea in 1892.
Photographic and spacecraft observations '' discovery image of the
inner moon Metis on 4 March 1979, showing the moon's tiny silhouette against the backdrop of Jupiter's clouds With the aid of telescopic photography with
photographic plates, further discoveries followed quickly over the course of the 20th century.
Himalia was discovered in 1904,
Elara in 1905,
Pasiphae in 1908,
Sinope in 1914,
Lysithea and
Carme in 1938,
Ananke in 1951, and
Leda in 1974. By the time that the
Voyager space probes reached Jupiter, around 1979, thirteen moons had been discovered, not including
Themisto, which had been observed in 1975, but was
lost until 2000 due to insufficient initial observation data. The Voyager spacecraft discovered an additional three
inner moons in 1979:
Metis,
Adrastea, and
Thebe.
Digital telescopic observations No additional moons were discovered until two decades later, with the fortuitous discovery of
Callirrhoe by the
Spacewatch survey in October 1999. During the 1990s, photographic plates phased out as digital
charge-coupled device (CCD) cameras began emerging in telescopes on Earth, allowing for wide-field surveys of the sky at unprecedented sensitivities and ushering in a wave of new moon discoveries.
Scott Sheppard, then a graduate student of
David Jewitt, demonstrated this extended capability of CCD cameras in a survey conducted with the
Mauna Kea Observatory's
UH88 telescope in November 2000, discovering eleven new irregular moons of Jupiter including the previously lost Themisto with the aid of automated computer algorithms. From 2001 onward, Sheppard and Jewitt alongside other collaborators continued surveying for Jovian irregular moons with the
Canada–France–Hawaii Telescope (CFHT), discovering an additional eleven in December 2001, one in October 2002, and nineteen in February 2003. At the same time, another independent team led by
Brett J. Gladman also used the CFHT in 2003 to search for Jovian irregular moons, discovering four and co-discovering two with Sheppard. From the start to end of these CCD-based surveys in 2000–2004, Jupiter's known moon count had grown from 17 to 63. All of these moons discovered after 2000 are faint and tiny, with
apparent magnitudes between 22–23 and diameters less than . As a result, many could not be reliably tracked and ended up becoming lost. Beginning in 2009, a team of astronomers, namely Mike Alexandersen, Marina Brozović, Brett Gladman, Robert Jacobson, and Christian Veillet, began a campaign to recover Jupiter's lost irregular moons using the CFHT and
Palomar Observatory's
Hale Telescope. They discovered two previously unknown Jovian irregular moons during recovery efforts in September 2010, prompting further follow-up observations to confirm these by 2011. One of these moons,
S/2010 J 2 (now Jupiter LII), has an apparent magnitude of 24 and a diameter of only , making it one of the faintest and smallest confirmed moons of Jupiter even . Meanwhile, in September 2011, Scott Sheppard, now a faculty member of the
Carnegie Institution for Science, discovered two more irregular moons using the institution's
Magellan Telescopes at
Las Campanas Observatory, raising Jupiter's known moon count to 67. Although Sheppard's two moons were followed up and confirmed by 2012, both became lost due to insufficient observational coverage. In 2016, while surveying for distant
trans-Neptunian objects with the Magellan Telescopes, Sheppard enticingly observed a region of the sky located near Jupiter, enticing him to search for Jovian irregular moons as a detour. In collaboration with
Chadwick Trujillo and
David Tholen, Sheppard continued surveying around Jupiter from 2016 to 2018 using the
Cerro Tololo Observatory's
Víctor M. Blanco Telescope and Mauna Kea Observatory's
Subaru Telescope. In the process, Sheppard's team recovered several lost moons of Jupiter from 2003 to 2011 and reported two new Jovian irregular moons in June 2017. Then in July 2018, Sheppard's team announced ten more irregular moons confirmed from 2016 to 2018 observations, bringing Jupiter's known moon count to 79. Among these was
Valetudo, which has an unusually distant prograde orbit that crosses paths with the retrograde irregular moons. Several more unidentified Jovian irregular satellites were detected in Sheppard's 2016–2018 search, but were too faint for follow-up confirmation. From November 2021 to January 2023, Sheppard discovered thirteen more irregular moons of Jupiter and confirmed them in archival survey imagery from 2003 to 2018, bringing the total count to 92. Among these was
S/2018 J 4, a highly inclined prograde moon that is now known to be in same orbital grouping as the moon
Carpo, which was previously thought to be solitary. On 22 February 2023, Sheppard announced three more moons discovered in a 2022 survey, now bringing Jupiter's total known moon count to 95. In a February 2023 interview with
NPR, Sheppard noted that he and his team are currently tracking even more moons of Jupiter, which should place Jupiter's moon count over 100 once confirmed over the next two years. On 30 April 2025, the Minor Planet Center announced two additional moons of Jupiter, bringing the count to 97. In 2026, the Minor Planet Center announced four moons of Jupiter on March 16 and an additional fourteen more on April 9, bringing the count to 115. Many more irregular moons of Jupiter will inevitably be discovered in the future, especially after the beginning of deep sky surveys by the upcoming
Vera C. Rubin Observatory and
Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope in the mid-2020s. The Rubin Observatory's aperture telescope and 3.5 square-degree field of view will probe Jupiter's irregular moons down to diameters of at apparent magnitudes of 24.5, with the potential of increasing the known population by up to tenfold. Likewise, the Roman Space Telescope's aperture and 0.28 square-degree field of view will probe Jupiter's irregular moons down to diameters of at magnitude 27.7, with the potential of discovering approximately 1,000 Jovian moons above this size. Discovering these many irregular satellites will help reveal their population's size distribution and impact histories, which will place further constraints to how the Solar System formed. ==Naming==