Duh! Forgot to look at LBB6!
How about this one. I am re-reading one of the "Flinx" books by Allen Dean Foster. It talks about the planets Moth and Flame in almost the same orbit so that Moth trails behind Flame. Could this be an example of a captured planet at orbit x.9 coupled with orbit y or y and y.1 ?
do some googling and see if the planets have been detailed in some fashion either officially or unofficially by fans.
Moth is a ringed planet that somehow had 2 sections of the rings removed (no explanation given) to make it look like a moth. It trails Flame in the orbit so the system looks like a moth chasing after a flame.
Thus the two camps hard sf and soft sf, shall never meet.
One of the ideas that I've incorporated IMTU is that the mass my be distributed through several satellites, or there may be one more massive satellite and some relatively insignificant moonlets.From the article you linked:
"For extrasolar systems, Canup and Ward suggest, the largest satellites of a Jupiter-mass planet would be Moon-to-Mars sized, so that Jovian-sized exoplanets would not be expected to host satellites as large as Earth. This is relevant to the potential habitability of satellites in extrasolar systems."
Mars = 6,795 km (4,247 miles).
Interesting.
Can someone who is familiar with the detailed system generation rules give me an idea of how large the moon of a gas giant might be, please?
Some might disagree.Out IRL, there's probably no hard limit.