Some jellyfish are only a centimetre
in size, but in two jellyfish species
the bell, in rare cases, grows to a
diameter of two metres. One of the
two species, Nomura's jellyfish
(Nemopilema nomurai), probably
holds the weight record, as it can
weigh up to 200kg. The red lion's
mane jellyfish (Cyanea capillata)
has the longest tentacles. An
individual found on a beach in
Massachusetts Bay in 1870 was
found to have 34-metre tentacles.
Stinging jellyfish
WHERE: The lion's mane jellyfish
exists in the North Atlantic, while
Australia’s most venomous jellyfish
is the sea wasp or Chironex fleckeri.
Despite its fearsome reputation,
only 60-80 deaths have been
recorded off Queensland and the
NT since the first report in 1883.
‘Trojans’ share their orbits
with larger objects such
as planets like Jupiter.
TROJANS
TROJANS
JUPITER
ASTRONOMY In the
Asteroid Belt between Mars
and Jupiter, and in the Kuiper
Belt on the outskirts of the
Solar System, many objects
share the same orbits. But
only a few of them have a
diameter greater than a
kilometre, so they are not the
biggest of heavenly bodies.
Planets do not share their
orbits with other objects.
Part of the definition of a
Solar System planet is that it
has used its gravity to clear
its orbit around the Sun.
When a large heavenly body
such as a planet orbits the
Sun, it will either collide with
other smaller celestial bodies
in that orbit, or interrupt
them, changing their orbits.
The two exceptions to
the rule are a planet’s
moons and ‘trojans’, which
orbit in the same path as a
planet while remaining at a
distance that corresponds to
an angle of 60 degrees in the
elliptical orbit.
EARTH’S ONLY TROJAN ASTEROID
‘2010 TK7’ is our only known ‘trojan’,
a roughly 300-metre asteroid orbiting
the Sun in the same path as Earth but
80 million km ahead. The asteroid
orbits both the sun and Earth’s own
orbit, causing the major fluctuations
marked out in green in the figure.
Jupiter has thousands of trojan
asteroids in two major clusters.
Saturn has two pairs of trojan
moons.
WORLD RECORDS
How big can
jellyfish grow?
Can several worlds
share the same orbit?
3 Can asteroids, planets and moons share an orbit around the Sun?
4
me
tre
s
is^ the^
longes
t^
record
ed^ leng
th^ of^
jellyfis
h^ tent
acles,
and^ th
at’s^ lon
ger^
than^ a
blue^ w
hale.
NAS
A^ &
PA
UL^
WIE
GER
T/U
NIV
ERS
ITY
OF
WE
STE
RN^
ON
TAR
IO,^
CA
NAT
URE
PL
2010 TK7’s fluctuations
2010 TK7
Earth
GREENLAND
scienceillustrated.com.au | 23