12 moons discovered around Jupiter, say scientists – including one 'oddball' that could destroy the others

Scientists have found a whole 12 new moons orbiting around Jupiter, in a breakthrough discovery about our mysterious neighbour.

They include an object that scientists refer to as an "oddball". It is just one kilometre in size, and is flying in the opposite direction to many of the planet's moons – and behaves entirely different to any of the other 78 objects orbiting the planet.

As such, it might be responsible for having smashed up many of the other objects that make up the moons around Jupiter. Scientists think that the vast number of objects orbiting the planet are probably the result of collisions earlier in its life, which have been captured by Jupiter and now continue to orbit it.

The tiny moon – which is set to be named Valetudo, after the Roman god Jupiter's great-granddaughter – is likely to continue having such collisions and could destroy itself, said scientists.

"This is an unstable situation," said Scott S. Sheppard, who helped lead the team who found the moons. "Head-on collisions would quickly break apart and grind the objects down to dust."

It is as if the moon is travelling the wrong way down a crowded highway, Sheppard told The Independent, making it far more likely that it would have a dangerous crash.

The new discoveries take the total number of objects found around the planet up to 79. Scientists expect there are probably around 100 different objects in total.

Saturn, Jupiter's closest rival, has a mere 62 moons orbiting around it.

All of the new moons around Jupiter are less than two miles wide. That accounts for why they had been left undiscovered until now, when scientists found them using incredibly sensitive telescopes.

The team behind the discovery also found the most distant known object in our solar system – and suggested that there might be a mysterious planet, known as Planet X or Planet Nine, hiding out in the depths of our solar system. The new discovery was made almost by accident as researchers were hunting for more evidence of that world beyond Pluto.

"Jupiter just happened to be in the sky near the search fields where we were looking for extremely distant Solar System objects, so we were serendipitously able to look for new moons around Jupiter while at the same time looking for planets at the fringes of our Solar System," said Sheppard.

Finding how the objects came to be formed and orbit around Jupiter could shed light on the formation of our own solar system. For instance, the new moons are so small that they would be influenced by any gas and dust that was around the planet – the fact that they managed to survive suggests they formed after that rotating disc of gas and dust that surrounded the sun formed into planets.