Earth’s Moon fits the dictionary definition of a satellite while breaking almost every rule that defines the artificial craft in orbit around the planet. The label “natural satellite” is a concession to geometry, not an attempt to blur the boundary between a captured world and engineered hardware.
Orbital mechanics supplies the dividing line. The Moon is locked in a long-term, gravitationally bound, near-resonant orbit shaped by tidal locking and angular momentum exchange, processes that operate over astronomical timescales. Artificial satellites occupy low or medium Earth orbits or geostationary slots designed for short operational lifetimes before atmospheric drag, station-keeping fuel limits or controlled deorbit end their trajectories.
Formation history deepens the split. The leading giant impact hypothesis treats the Moon as debris from a planetary-scale collision that then accreted and thermalized, more akin to a binary planet configuration than a manufactured object. Artificial satellites, by contrast, are injected into specific trajectories via launch vehicles and constant attitude control, never reaching the self-organized dynamical equilibrium that defines a natural satellite system.
Hidden in the terminology is a hierarchy of gravitational binding energy and dynamical stability. The Moon shapes Earth’s tides, precession and long-term orbital evolution, acting as a major term in the system’s Hamiltonian. Human-made satellites remain perturbations in that field, dependent on guidance algorithms and propellant rather than on deep, conservative gravitational coupling.