Is {pluto|sedna} A Planet? 594
Dr. Zowie writes "NASA's announcement last week of Sedna's discovery reignited the debate
over whether Pluto is a planet. Dr. Alan Stern a noted planetary scientist and leader of the New Horizons mission to Pluto, pours on some gasoline with this
article in which he skewers the various arguments against Pluto-as-planet. Choice quotes include 'You wouldn't deny a chihauhau a place among dogs because it is too small,' and 'if your brain was so completely full of names of people that it just couldn't take any more, would anyone new who you met after that, therefore not be a person?'"
I love this stuff (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I love this stuff (Score:5, Informative)
Re:I love this stuff (Score:3, Funny)
Wrong (Score:3, Informative)
The supreme court rulled that it was a vegitibale so schools could meet nutrienal guide lines.
Rule of thumb:
Does it have seeds? then its a fruit.
Re:Wrong (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Wrong (Score:4, Funny)
Therefore, tomatoes are vegetables, just like apples, peas, and pine trees.
Totally Wrong (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Totally Wrong (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Wrong (Score:4, Informative)
Nix v. Hedden, 149 U.S. 304 (1893) [findlaw.com]
Re:Wrong (Score:4, Informative)
Carrot Jam is quite common - you can buy it in corner shops around here - however food regulations specify that jam must have a certain percentage of fruit to be called jam (which is good - I want to be sure what I'm buying is what it says on the pack). This is just a workaround for it.
Re:I love this stuff (Score:3, Interesting)
What is common sense anyway? Something that most people believe? What the hell good is THAT?
At the very least, tradition is NOT a good reason to believe something when presented with conflicting evidence.
Funny, I didn't care about the tomato thing at all until you brought it up.
Re:I love this stuff (Score:4, Informative)
In real world usage, having high levels of sugar is a requirement for fruit, being from an herbacious plant is a requirement for vegetables. Tomatoes don't have as much sugar as most things considered fruit, and they certainly are from herbacious plants.
Re:I love this stuff (Score:3, Insightful)
Common Sense is that thing that is distinctly lacking in today's society, the thing that makes people like me able to drive a car and remember to leave my hands on the wheel instead of taking them off because the manual doesn't explicitly state that they should both be used at once.
Its that thing that means I don't go throwing hot coffee over myself, no matter HOW hot it might not be. The same way that I don't run my fingers down knife blade
Re:I love this stuff (Score:5, Funny)
The reason for the reclassification of tomatos by the biologists was that they started to buy into the evolutionary classification schemes. So the taxonomy was redefined to fit the new theory."
What the FUCK have you been smoking in your pipe?
Fruit (froot) [n]--the ripened reproductive body of a seed plant [hyperdictionary.com]
What's the seed-bearing part of an apple tree? An apple. The seed-bearing part of an orange tree? An orange. And what part of a freakin' tomato plant holds the seeds?
A carrot is a vegetable. Celery is a vegetable. Lettuce is a vegetable. Potatoes... who the fuck cares about a potato is. But just because people are more likely to slice it up and put it in sandwiches or salads than eat it whole doesn't make a tomato a vegetable. Heck, some salads include slices of apples; does that make an apple a vegetable?
And the sad thing is I bet you're a biology major as well.
Re:I love this stuff (Score:3, Informative)
As for the tomato == vegetable idea, if you don't know this, it may interest you. The supreme court of the united states declared the tomato a vegetable sometime in teh 1830s. At that time vegetables were taxed and fruits were not. A fruit importer was shipping tomatoes tax free, and he got in trouble for it. After that decision, tomatoes had all the legal attributes that vegetables did.
The guy's name was John Nix if you want to google up some more inf
Re:I love this stuff (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I love this stuff (Score:4, Informative)
However, peppers, eggplants, and tomatoes are also all vegetables. The two are not exclusive, as fruit is a technical term with a specific definition. A vegetable is any plant grown to be eaten, or the part of the plant that is eaten. Fruits are vegetables. So are nuts and grains.
Everyone knows that a tomato is a fruit. Most wrongly assume that means it isn't also a vegetable. The lesson here is, check your facts before you go spouting off in a supercilious manner.
Re:I love this stuff (Score:4, Interesting)
Fruit (froot) [n]--the ripened reproductive body of a seed plant
Try reading a dictionary that was written in 1800 or earlier. And try looking up the definition of tomato rather than the definition of fruit. You are reading a definition that is the result of the taxonomists having won and in the process completely missing the fact that there was ever a legitimate dispute. The farmers classified the tomato as a vegetable because it has a thin skin and is perishable. That is why the supreme court rulled the way it did, the tax law in question was written when the previous description was in force.
The OED definitions of 'vegetable' go from the incredibly broad (any plant) to the more specific (any plant that is eaten for food). Curiously I did not actually find the scientific definition cited in my copy (2nd ed). But that might be because the entry is two pages long and I overlooked.
The point I was making is that the whole idea of rigid taxonomy is a Victorian invention. The idea of fixed immutable categories that are determined by rigid application of science is very much a late 19th century view.
That is the point at which the Oxford English Dictionary, the Encyclopaedia Britanica, Principia Mathematica are all being written. Then by 1930 it has all slammed to an abrupt halt as relativity, Goedel's incompleteness theorem and quantum mechanics have all become mainstream. Suddenly the logical positivist view of the universe is no longer universal.
There is some logic to a taxonomy of fruits and veg based on genetics, there is equal logic to a taxonomy based on how well it keeps. The farmers lost out to the scientists here because the scientists got to write the taxonomy.
When it comes to the definition of 'planet' there is no real scientific basis for the taxonomy. Planets have simply been defined to be obejects orbiting a star that are not orbiting anything else (another planet) and are large enough to form a sphere under their own gravity. This gets subjective when the term 'sphere' is debated. Clearly the earth and the other planets are only roughly spherical, how much tolerance is there?
It is a silly dispute as are most taxonomic disputes, Pluto and Seldane are planets if people chose to call them such. Witgenstein was right.
Re:I love this stuff (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I love this stuff (Score:3, Funny)
Tomato = vegtable = fruit? (Score:3, Insightful)
Unless you want to say that a vegtable is any sort of large plant product that doesn't classify as a fruit, I'd say that the Tomatoe can reasonably classify as both.
Re:I love this stuff (Score:5, Informative)
The tomato is botanically a fruit [straightdope.com].
Brontosaurus never existed [straightdope.com].
And you can blame the Greeks for the continent thing [straightdope.com].
That Cecil! Is there anything he doesn't know?
-Carolyn
Re:I love this stuff (Score:4, Insightful)
It's part of the schtick. I'm not even sure Cecil Adams is a real person.
The point is that there are some subjects where you can have right and wrong, 'the earth is flat' being one of them. But when it comes down to definitions there may not be an ultimate 'truth'.
Well, in the case of the tomato, it's a matter of which side you're coming at it from. To a botanist, a tomato is a fruit. To a chef, it's a vegetable.
I really don't think there was ever a brontosaurus. I mean, they put the wrong head on the skeleton. That's not really a matter of opinion.
Pluto I would call a minor planet. Sedna I might call a minor planet. But you're right, the line isn't bright.
-Carolyn
Re:I love this stuff (Score:4, Funny)
Quote but I forget from where, sorry for no credit.
It is science that tells us that the tomato is a fruit. It is wisdom that keeps us from adding it to a fruit salad.
Re:I love this stuff (Score:4, Funny)
I reckon that these paleontologist guys are just making these names up.
W00t! (Score:3, Funny)
Err, by 'FP', I am of course refering to 'Final Planet'.
Of course. What did you think I meant?
Huxley
Asteroids? (Score:4, Interesting)
Requirements? Look to gravity! (Score:5, Interesting)
I also think, for the record, that if something as large as Luna, or Titan, or Europa were out floating in space orbiting the sun and not another planet, they would be considered planets too.
Re:Requirements? Look to gravity! (Score:5, Insightful)
I like this definition a lot. While it does leave some wiggle room as to what exactly constitutes "spherical", it is still based on a physical property of the object related to its mass. This makes it better than any arbitrary size/mass requirement (e.g. "Anything as big or bigger than Pluto").
Pluto, BTW, Sedna, and many of the largest moons can all do this.
I'm going to be extremely unhappy with any definition that demotes Pluto. Also, anything that makes Pluto not a planet is going to be close to making Mercury not a planet, and that's just not acceptable.
I also think, for the record, that if something as large as Luna, or Titan, or Europa were out floating in space orbiting the sun and not another planet, they would be considered planets too.
Titan is bigger than Mercury, so a Sun-orbiting Titan not being considered a planet is unacceptable.
I'm not an astronomer (but I play one on occasional weekends), but of all the definitions I've heard, "big enough to be spherical and orbiting a star" is the simplest and most logical.
And for the record -- if there was some comet out in the Ort cloud with an incredibly eccentric orbit around the sun that was the size of Titan, that'd be a planet too. IMHO.
Re:Requirements? Look to gravity! (Score:3, Interesting)
Though the earths "moon" should be considered a second plant in our bi-planetary system. It is large enough that the center of gravity for our orbit is well off from the center of the earth.
(just another pet peeve of mine when it comes to astronomy)
Re:Requirements? Look to gravity! (Score:4, Insightful)
Cool - another point to debate. What is the transition point from 'planet-moon' to 'bi-planetary' ?
Basing it on the center of gravity seems like a good idea, but 'well off from the center' is a little bit fuzzy. We could pick a number - say, 50% of the larger planet's radius - in which case the Earth-Moon system meets the criterion, since the center point is about 75% of the Earth's radius away from the Earth's center (some references [google.com]).
But now we've done the same thing the original article was complaining about - we picked an arbitrary value, just, well, because.
It's seems like a physical point would work a bit better - say, the surface of the larger planet. Then the definition becomes a bit easier: if the center of gravity is in space, it is a dual-planet system. Otherwise, it's a planet-moon.
How you categorize a center of gravity within an atmosphere is left as an exercise ...
Re:Requirements? Look to gravity! (Score:5, Interesting)
Planetoid: Any object that becomes round by its own gravity but does not sustain fussion.
Moon: Any planetoid that orbits another planetoid (let's face it, it's a generic term and nothing will ever change that). BTW: This would demote a lot of "moons" to mere satelites.
Planet: Any planetoid that is more massive than the the rest of the matter in its orbit combined.
Re:Requirements? Look to gravity! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Requirements? Look to gravity! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Asteroids? (Score:5, Insightful)
Ceres is round (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Ceres is round (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Asteroids? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Asteroids? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Asteroids? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Asteroids? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Asteroids? (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not like there's some legal reason to have the definition of a planet rigidly defined, it doesn't effect the money anyone gets, it doesn't influence political boundaries, and it won't get anyone out of jail.. so who cares?
If it's big, it's a planet. If it's not big, it's an asteroid. If it's not big and made of ice, it's a comet.
Might as well debate which text editor is bettor or whether we should be putting GNU in front of Linux.. it's such a silly thing to discuss it baffles me this shows up in the news so often.
Re:Asteroids? (Score:3, Funny)
But then we'd have to define "big".
Let's just call them all "marklars" and be done with it.
Re:Asteroids? (Score:4, Insightful)
Oh, and if anyone come up with a grand unified theory, they shouldn't publish it, because just think of all the physics texts they'd have to update.
People? (Score:5, Funny)
The two-legged things in my office have names?! Not just email addresses?
Re:People? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:People? (Score:3, Funny)
Mmmm... Flamewar.. (Score:5, Funny)
You haven't seen squat until you've seen astronomers argue.
Astronomer's Flamewar (Score:3, Funny)
Astronomer: "oh oh oh, yeah, well, you have your head up Uranus"
Re:Mmmm... Flamewar.. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Mmmm... Flamewar.. (Score:3, Interesting)
MMM! Useless trivia! (Score:5, Interesting)
Asteroids are also called planetoids, which just flips the above comparison on its head -- they're like planets, but they're not exactly like planets. The really amusing thing about this double terminology is the way it confuses Star Trek writers.
Then there's the word planet, from a Greek word that translates literally as "wanderer". All the objects in the sky that move with respect to the stars were originally considered planets. Not including the asteroids, because you can't see an asteroid without a telescope which hadn't been invented yet. But what about the Sun and Moon? These were considered planets too. But not the Earth, because everybody knew that the Earth didn't move. Hey, motion is define in reference to the Earth, how could the Earth move? What is that Copernicus dude taking, anyway?
Incidentally, that's why there are seven days to the week. Each planet that you can see without a telescope (and thus that is actually considered to exist) is dominated by a deity, and each deity has their own special day: Saturn Day, Sun Day, Moon Day, Mars Day, Mercury Day, Jupiter Day, and Venus Day. Most of the names we use in English come from Norse gods that medieval scholars thought were cognate with familiar Roman gods; their logic was a little stretched, but nobody cared, since the Norse religion was already dead, and hadn't involved planet worship anyway.
But I digress. The important point it that all these names are historical relics -- there's no way to be really precise with them. The cover issues we no longer care about, and don't cover issues we do. If you want to be more precise than anybody is in real life, you refer to rocky body, gaseous bodies, and Kuiper objects. But in real life you use familiar terms, because they're, well, familiar. If there are confusions and ambiguities, you take a moment to clear them up ("for the purposes of this discussion, any large body that orbits the sun is a planet; also Greenland is an island, not a continent"), and then you move on to stuff that really matters [intriguing.com].
Who cares? (Score:3, Insightful)
But really, who cares? Is this a big deal?
Well.. (Score:5, Interesting)
One agreed-upon qualification is being formed round by its own gravity. I'm not sure if that applies to Sedna.
Re:Well.. (Score:3, Informative)
See: Mule
Not so simple (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Well.. (Score:3, Funny)
I remember back in high school I caused a bit of a fuss when the teacher came out with this definition. I held up my hand, and pointed out that, according to that definition, he and I were not the same species. (It may not be obvious in this forum, but I'm male.
Funny thing was that he was flustered for a bit, and didn't quite know how to answer. He obviously hadn't ever thought about i
Re:Well.. (Score:5, Informative)
From the article:
The main problem is that as we discover new objects, some planets may cease to become planets. And what happens if a planet shifts its orbit closer to a bigger planet? Does it stop being a planet until it moves far enough away?
Having read the article, I like his criterion: massive anough for gravity to form it into a spherical object. This doesn't change over time; it's based on physics; and it's very similar to the criterion for whether or not an object is a star (massive enough for fusion to provide the majority of its energy).
Pluto should be called... (Score:3, Funny)
You say Brontosaurus, I say Apatosaurus (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:You say Brontosaurus, I say Apatosaurus (Score:5, Insightful)
If you were to tell them that we have learned that Charon is not really a moon of Pluto, but that they are close to the same size so they revolve around each other like people dancing, they would think that is really cool. If you further went on to tell them that we have found out that there are a whole bunch of icy subplanets like Pluto and Charon but smaller, and maybe one day we will find one that is bigger, and maybe they could be the one to find it, they will get even more excited about astronomy.
Honestly, it is the adults that are stubborn about keeping the status quo, not the kids.
Re:You say Brontosaurus, I say Apatosaurus (Score:4, Insightful)
Whatever the scientific community ends up agreeing on in this case, there are some people that will always insist there are nine planets because that's what they were taught as kids and that's that. So what. Those of us who know better will raise a generation with sharper critical thinking skills, who can understand not only the concept of evolution but also that science itself evolves as we continue to integrate newfound knowledge.
I say it isn't a planet, but is a minor planet (Score:5, Interesting)
So here is my reasoning from an old assinment of mine:
A) Is Pluto a planet? Many measurable criteria signify that Pluto is a planet, but it is not a major planet. It is too small to be a major planet, so it is a minor planet or a giant comet. The only reason some astronomers still accept Pluto as one of the major planets, is because an American astronomer discovered Pluto in 1930, and they feel that changing its status to "minor" will minimize Pluto's significance in the solar system. Obviously books will need to be changed to reflect its new status, and many feel it would just be simpler to let it continue to be seen as a major planet, despite the facts saying otherwise.
It might make sense to consider placing Pluto into different categories, such as minor planet and comet. "Dual status already exists for some comets and minor planets, which are given formal numbers and names in both kinds of catalogues." [Green] The various categories we have for collections of matter in our solar system are many. The main categories are star, giant gaseous planets, smaller rocky planets orbiting the sun inside the "asteroid belt", satellites orbiting both major and minor planets, trojans, comets, trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs) and Kuiper belt objects. Meteoroids, and bits of dust, gas, and sub-atomic particles round out the other matter in our solar system.
A large asteroid named Ceres was first discovered in 1801, and was first presumed to be a comet. Then it was classified as a planet. That means astronomers, hypothesized that Ceres was a planet, they tested their hypothesis, and upon inspection of the available data years later they concluded that Ceres part of a new family of minor planets that was just being discovered. We now know of other TNOs, and Pluto doesn't look all too different from them, so we could adjust our view to place it as one of those other 100+ objects.
We can teach school children valuable lessons about science and astronomy if we teach them the history of the classification of Pluto, but stop calling it the ninth major planet. Pluto would not be called a major planet if it were discovered today, so it is a bad lesson in science to ignore data in favour of political concerns. People who say Pluto should remain a planet because for 70 years we have called it so, do not know the history of astronomy. They either don't know or don't care that many celestial bodies have been reclassified as new scientific data is gathered. Outdated models are thrown away in favour of newer, and more accurate models. Pluto no longer fits the major planet model that we use for the 8 major planets, so with our new data we should find Pluto a new category.
B)
Pluto was classified as a planet, when the data available to astronomers indicated it was one. Now the technology has allowed us to gather more accurate data about Pluto's characteristics, we should re-evaluate it's current categorization. People have had to re-evaluate "scientific facts" for millennia. Classifying the Earth as the center of the universe made sense several hundred years ago, but now we know more data that shows it cannot be the center.
From what we know about the physical characteristics about Pluto, I say it is a special minor planet. It seems odd to classify it as a kind of a comet, since I've seen no evidence that it leaves a trail of debris, and we don't know if the core is rocky, or ice like.
Re:I say it isn't a planet, Harvard (Score:4, Informative)
Photos of Minor planet with a moon (Score:4, Informative)
Dog? (Score:5, Funny)
Dog? I always that chihauhaus were large rats.
Re:Dog? (Score:3, Funny)
Quoted quote is ridiculous (Score:3, Interesting)
yeah, no kidding. But if the definition of a dog included, "must not weigh less than 30lbs" then yes, a chihauhau would most certainly not be dog.
I know there is no such definitive critereon for planets, but jeeze...a simple webster's definition includes the phrase "...large heavenly bodies..." (emph mine). Any reasonable defintion of large would probably exclude pluto, just as any reasonable definition of "large dog" would most certainly exclude the lowly chihauhau
Let the Astrologers decide. (Score:5, Funny)
We should have stuck to the original five. Mercury, Mars, Venus, Jupiter and Saturn. Earth doesn't count, since all these revolve around it.
Let's not mess with our destinies. Don't upset the natural systems any more.
Re:Let the Astrologers decide. (Score:4, Informative)
The original seven, actually. The sun and the moon were planets. And yes, they all revolved around Earth. Church "scientists" were the first to add to this system; they put Heaven above the planets.
Criteria? (Score:4, Interesting)
The fact that it orbits the Sun, specifically? The Sun's nothing special, we've found plenty of other stars that have planets. And if the Sun snuffed it tomorrow, would the Earth cease to be a planet? Would Ganymede be a planet if it were let loose for a stroll on its own away from Jupiter?
What about moons? Venus and Mercury don't have them, and those two rocks around Mars don't count.
It can't be geological activity, because Mercury is dormant and Io, a moon, beats everything we've yet seen for volcanic eruptions.
I think that having a discernable stata and a core of different composition than the crust sounds like a good rule of thumb, because then you're not just talking about a lump of rock that happens to be round, like Ceres. Now we just need to see what Pluto, Quaoar, Sedna have got in that department.
planet, definitely (both Pluto & Sedna) (Score:5, Interesting)
In short, there are more reasons for them to BE classes as planets than for them NOT to be.
On a related note, 'Sedna' is a really good name for an HMO, but a really _horrible_ name for a planet! *booo* Hell, even 'Planet 10' is a better name than Sedna!
Re:planet, definitely (both Pluto & Sedna) (Score:5, Insightful)
Ehhh...
To be really picky about Newton's third law, moons don't orbit the planet itself, but instead both tend to revolve around a point between the two centers of mass (ie. the center of mass of the planet-moon system) because of mutual gravitational attraction. For example, the reason we're able to find (disgustingly massive) extrasolar planets is that the planets pull on its parent star enough for the star's motion to be visible from here.
I don't know off the top of my head whether the mass ratio between the earth and the moon is enough to pull the center of mass of the earth-moon system outside of the earth, but I do know the center of mass of Pluto-Charon is well outside of Pluto.
So that might throw a wrench into the works of a "it has a moon so it's a planet" idea.
Re:planet, definitely (both Pluto & Sedna) (Score:3, Informative)
Despite this, many astronomers still classify the earth-moon system as a double planet rather than as a primary+satellite. This is partly because, as Alan Stern argues, they basically do use the self-gravity rule to define "planet". Another line of reasoning is that the moon's orbit is everywhere concave to the sun, so technically it isn't orbiting
Re:planet, definitely (both Pluto & Sedna) (Score:3, Interesting)
If arguing that Sedna is not a planet based on size is pathetic, then you had best be prepared to grant full planet status to every single asteroid and comet in the solar system. For that matter, why stop there? Doesn't every speck of space dust orbiting the sun deserve to be called a planet?
Face it, size matters. We can hopefully all agree that Jupi
Re:planet, definitely (both Pluto & Sedna) (Score:4, Insightful)
None of the steroids or comets would be planets, nor specs of dust nor billiard balls orbiting the sun. This seems like a much more reasonable criterion than "it's bigger than 2000km."
Inconsistency (Score:5, Insightful)
Other than that, a pretty good discussion. His suggestion will still require an arbitrary boundary (how round is round?) but it is not totally arbitrary.
His rule has a problem that it turns into planets objects that we had previously decided were not planets. It has the advantage of being less arbitrary than the alternatives. Whether the advantage outweighs the disadvantage is a matter of taste.
Approach to understanding the solar system. (Score:5, Insightful)
This journey approach would be far more interesting to the kids and by the time you got to the point of describing pluto and charon, they would have an understanding of how diverse (for lack of non PC word) matter in space is and would be less concerned about sticking a specific catagory on it, and just be excited that it was yet another unique and interesting thing.
It's the difference between decribing the cool terrain, people and features in country as opposed to just memorizing the state capitals. The former is far more interesting, and informative, and kids will eat it up.
Flawed metaphor (Score:5, Funny)
chihauhaus are clearly rodents, not dogs. Therefor, Sedna is not a planet, but a rodent.
Pluto a planet???? (Score:4, Funny)
What about orbital stability? (Score:4, Interesting)
Perhaps he didn't mention it because all objects meeting his "gravity rules" requirement happen to have stable orbits.
More interesting detail about Sedna (Score:5, Interesting)
There may be another Earth-sized planet that was ejected by Neptune and that in turn shifted the orbit of Sedna. Why don't we see that planet? Because it may be in the aphelion, perhaps light week away. Not only it is far away from us, but it's also in the darkness, being far away from the Sun.
Or maybe the Sun approached another star in the past, which changed the orbits of the outermost Kuiper Belt Objects. Finally, maybe it was our Sun that snatched Sedna from another star.
Sedna is the decisive member of *new* class (Score:3, Interesting)
There was a good presentation at today's blackboard lunch [ucsb.edu] at the Institute for Theoretical Physics in Santa Barbara today. The first 15 minutes or so are a great summary of why Sedna is important for our understanding of the solar sys
Useful definition of planet (Score:5, Interesting)
Second, the object must be round. This criteria excludes most asteroids.
Third, the body must be large enough that its own gravitational forces can account for it shape. This criteria excludes any objects which might happen to be round but can't really be called planets, such as small round rocks or asteroids.
Fourth, there must not be any similarly sized objects in the same orbit unless the gravity of one significantly affects the orbit of the others. This requirement excludes comets and all remaining asteroids.
Fifth, the object cannot be in orbit around another object that otherwise qualifies as a planet. Objects which orbit eachother may qualify as a double planet if all other criteria are met.
eh? (Score:5, Funny)
Ummmm... given that the only difference between a gas giant and a star is their mass, does this statement make any sense at all? If a planet has "enough mass to become a star at some point" then it will immediately ignite. If it doesn't, it won't.
It's not like planets get a choice in the matter. It's not like Jupiter might get ambitious one day and decide to get lit.
Re:eh? (Score:4, Funny)
I'm not going to touch that comment with a ten foot monolith.
SB
Splitting hairs and planets (Score:4, Interesting)
Mmmmmm... Somebody who likes the sound of his own voice way too much.
As far as planet vs planetoid goes, I'd think the difference relies on how much influence is imparted on what body of mass. For instance, the majority of influence imparted on asteroids comes from the planets and stars they revolve around, whereas the planets principle influence is the sun.
So which influnces these celetial bodies more? The sun or other planets around it? Does the body influence other celetial bodies a great deal? Does it have it's own bodies trapped in orbit around it? If this body careened through the solar system close to a planet (say, earth), how much influence would it impart on us??
I'm leaning more toward planet, especially in the case of Pluto. Sedna, I'm not so sure about given the lack of hard data, but I'm pretty sure a near pass from Pluto would seriously screw things up here. Besides, all this crap is relative anyway. I'm sure if you had a huge enough planet, Earth could be considered a moon or something.
Re:Splitting hairs and planets (Score:3, Interesting)
Technically, size has nothing to do with moon-ness. Jupiter has several moons that are larger than Pluto, and I believe Ganymede is larger than Mercury.
The only relation between being a moon and the body's size is that a moon can't be larger than its parent planet.
If someone considered the sun a planet, Earth would be a moon. (As would Jupiter.)
The problem is: (Score:4, Informative)
First: The designation 'planet' should mean something. Sure we can group small dogs under the category of dogs but that doesn't mean we can go around calling pomeranians' greyhounds. The same with planets. We can group pluto and sedna under the category of masses but we shouldn't call them planets. Planets should be its own category of the junk floating around in the universe, just as asteroids and comets are categories. When someone says this object is a planet we should thus be able to make some assumptions about that object. Otherwise we have to break that category up even more. If we have to have sedna added and a couple hundred other, the category of planets becomes so vague that it becomes meaningless. Thus we will have to break the category of planets up into sub categories in order to get any meaning out of it: gas gaints, rocky planets, etc.. Think of it like the dogs again. If we call every dog a pomeranian then the label 'pomeranian' loses its meaning.
Now the problems with his gravity rules. The first problem is moons. No one wants to call luna a planet. If we go around saying a planet in the solar system (Jupiter) has 32 other planets orbiting it, things will get very confusing awfully quick. So we would want to declare that for it to be a planet it has to orbit the sun. But then their is the problem of 'planets' that orbit each other. For example, we see this in some asteroids - two asteroids that orbit each other while traveling in a circular path around the sun - similiar to binary star systems where two stars orbit each other and tavel in a circular path around the galaxy. They can't both be moons. They can't both be planets. And what about rogue planets that no longer orbit a star but have been orphaned and are currently floating in interstellar space.
The second problem is comet-like bodies. What if you have a planet that as it orbits its sun sheds its atmosphere and mass to the point that it loses the gravity necessary to keep it circular. Likewise, what if you run into an asteroid that through a series of collisions gains enough mass to become a planet. This is fine but what happens when you have a whole belt of such objects. When you classify something, its best it stays in that classification for awhile or else the act of classification becomes somewhat meaningless. For example, you don't classify water by its mass in a rain storm cause that mass is constantly changing. Rather you state the rate of that change. If you didn't, you'd be forced to constantly reclassify it every observation.
So simply stating that gravity rule as the only criteria doesn't work. We'd have to make it more complex. Moons aren't planets (assuming you still want the word moon and planet to mean anything - and yes I know some moons could have their own moons). Belts like the asteroid belt and the kuiper belt where objects could conceivably change in every observation from planet to non planet and back would create a nightmare for astronomers using such a system. And remember these are only problems we face with a small data set like our solar system. Add in problems like the Super jupiters, some of which are undoubtfully brown stars or close to becoming them, and other as of yet unknowns and one could only imagine even more problems would arise in the gravity rule system. Now if these means adding addition requirements or not, or perhaps just abandoning the whole system is anybodies guess. He's write in stating you can't just use the old size requirement - but that was and is why we called pluto a planet and ceres an asteroid. Becuase someone said theres a size difference - there is really no other reason. Some asteroids have atmospheres. Some have moons. Some planets don't have moons. Some planets have moons larger than other planets. Perhaps the best bet is to just throw all the labels out and start over.
Is Earth a planet? (Score:5, Interesting)
People argue so much over where to draw the line between Planet and non-Planet, but everyone seems to take for granted that Earth is a member of the former class.
Bigots.
2 Skinnee J's (Score:3, Funny)
With depravity I break laws of gravity
Blast past the atmosphere to the last frontier
I go boldly through space and time
The skies the limit but they're limiting the sky
I break orbit by habit, ignite satellites and leave rings round the planet
A flying ace like that beagle
Nevertheless this alien remains illegal
'cause their discovery don't cover me
the immigrant's been left in the cold to grow old and disintegrate
discriminate against the distant and disclaim this
cause small minds can't see past Uranus
But I shun their rays, 'cause stuns just a phase
And my odyssey runs in two thousand and one ways
And I can see clearly now like Hubble,
Shoved off the shuttle, here's my rebuttal
It's a planet
Who you represent? I represent the smallest planet
Attorney in this tourney versus those who've tried to ban it
If you don't agree go see Interplanet Janet
Cause sun is star, like Pluto is planet
Lend me all your ears and let me state my case
About all the types of satellites you must embrace
Cause like my parents, great grandparents
This planet was an immigrant
To deport it makes no sense
It's an upstanding member of the solar system
Apply the laws of earth and make it a victim
Of Proposition 187
When Pluto spawns a moon it will apply to the heavens
I will damn thee like Judas of Iscariot
If you demote this mote remote to affiliate
It's like taking ET's custody from Elliot
Support your Lilliput, cause simply put
Pluto is a planet
Do it for the children
Lyrics [2sj.com] - MP3 [2sj.com]
-prator
Classification Systems (Score:3, Insightful)
Pluto has more in common with a whole class of objects which spend most of their time out past the orbit of Neptune. Sedna is another such large object but there are hundreds more identified.
That Neptune and Pluto's orbits cross is, I think, a major blot on our current classification.
Continuous sets, discrete sets (Score:3, Informative)
Anyway. The more phenomena we discover, and the faster we discover them, the less interesting each individual one becomes. The more diverse they are, the less likely it is that the 'labels' invented 3000 years ago will still make sense. We're lucky that the simple categorization 'planet/comet/asteroid' has held up as long as it has. We've patched it up with TNOs and KPOs and so on, but at some point it'll be a continuum. A sparsely sampled continuum, but a continuum nonetheless.
Poll over at sciscoop - let's vote on it! (Score:4, Interesting)
Sedna is:
tenth planet 17 votes - 29 %
the eleventh planet 14 votes - 24 %
the 42nd planet 9 votes - 15 %
not a planet! 17 votes - 29 %
The IAU is drafting a position on this. (Score:3, Informative)
The IAU's current concern is to distinguish between extrasolar planets and dark stars. It takes about 13x the mass of Jupiter before an object generates the gravitational pressure needed to ignite the D-D reaction. So the IAU says that if it's smaller than 13x Jupiter, it's a planet. Bigger than that, it's a "brown dwarf" if not shining.
Re:a chihauhau? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Enough already (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Enough already (Score:5, Insightful)
I wrote a cool program in Matlab for a graduate astrodynamics class I took that would plot the planets and their orbits at any time. One thing immediately jumps out at you.... Pluto is not a freakin planet! Any good [stmarys.ca] diagram [uoregon.edu] of the solar system shows to screwed up Pluto is.
For those who hate pictures, here are the orbit elements of the planets in tabular form [nasa.gov]
First off, note that Pluto has an eccentricity of almost 0.25, that is WAY oblate. Now, someone will probably point out that Mercury is nearly that oblate and we can argue whether Mercury is really a planet also. It probably is, however, it is soooo close to the Sun that it has comparatively zero angular momentum - and remember, that is the job of the planets, to store the bulk of the angular momentum of the solar system as it was formed (you do remember that right?) Anyway, Mercury is so close to the Sun, that its orbit is much more easily perturbed by higher J2 and J3 harmonics of the Sun and you would expect it to have be a little out of plane and eccentric due to multibody effects as well.
Moving on, how about that inclination... 17 degrees. Again, excluding Mercury, the next closest is 3.4 deg and the next closest outer planet is 2.5 deg.
And how bout these [nasa.gov] data. Check out the rotational period... 153 hrs.. the next closest outer planet is 17 hrs.
Sorry folks, it is a captured Kupiter belt object... move along.
Re:What about the children (Score:4, Funny)
Very
Evil
Mother
Just
Sent
Us
Nothing
Re:Gravitational Rounding AND Atmosphere (Score:5, Insightful)
First -- how much atmosphere? Every sizable rock will be able to hold onto at least a few gas molecules.
Second -- the Sun has stripped Mercury of its atmosphere. However, if Mercury were orbiting at the distance of Mars, it would have been able to retain quite a bit more air. Your definition is biased against close planets.
Third -- our atmosphere came largely from outgassing. A planet with a different composition (say, similar to the moon), or less active tectonics, might have dramatically less of an atmosphere.
So, you have now tied the definition of what is a planet to a complicated interplay between its size, composition, geology, distance from the sun, and who-knows-what-else factors.
Can't we just say "You need to be this big to be called a planet" and leave it at that?