The Moon is a moon. You can't beat thousands of years of linguistic precedence, no matter how hard you try. <img src="/images/icons/wink.gif" /> In fact, other moons are only called moons because they are, in some ways, similar to the Moon.<br /><br />However, situations like the Earth-Moon and Pluto-Charon pairs are sometimes called "double planets". The smaller body is often described as a moon anyway. But there are more ambiguous situations. I don't recall the name, but radar studies of one asteroid revealed that it is probably a double asteroid -- two bodies of nearly equal size orbiting a common center of gravity.<br /><br />I would consider an object a moon if it is a natural satellite of a larger body, where the common center of gravity is within the average surface of the larger body, and where the object itself is not piddlingly small in comparison to the parent object. I don't know where the cutoff for "piddlingly small" ought to be, alas. I want to exclude tiny fragments such as most of the particles in Saturn's rings. I suspect Cassini is going to heat up the debate about the small end of the discussion, as it finds more and more moons in Saturn's rings. <div class="Discussion_UserSignature"> <p> </p><p><font color="#666699"><em>"People assume that time is a strict progression of cause to effect, but actually from a non-linear, non-subjective viewpoint it's more like a big ball of wibbly wobbly . . . timey wimey . . . stuff."</em> -- The Tenth Doctor, "Blink"</font></p> </div>