Mass of Dwarf Planet Eris 27% Greater than Pluto 220
jcgam69 writes "When it was discovered in 2005, some thought Eris should be considered the 10th planet of our solar system. Everyone still considered Pluto a planet then. At first, Eris was thought to be slightly larger. Now — with the help of Eris' moon — Eris is known to be 27% more massive than Pluto. If Pluto had remained a planet to the entire community of astronomers, surely Eris would be considered the 10th planet."
Haiku on a Distant Rock (Score:4, Funny)
No one loves you now but me.
And Clyde Tombaugh [wikipedia.org]'s urn.
Re:Haiku on a Distant Rock (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Haiku on a Distant Rock (Score:5, Funny)
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music video (Score:2)
Poor lonely Pluto;
No one loves you now but me.
You actually aren't alone. These guys [youtube.com] were so moved with affection for Pluto that they created a music video. Rock on, Pluto!
Where are we going? (Score:2)
When?
Real Soon!!! [imdb.com]
th
New Nmemonic (Score:5, Funny)
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My Very Excellent Mother Just Serverd Us Ninja Excrement.
My Very Excellent Mother Just Served Us NOTHING! (Score:2)
My Very Excellent Mother Just Served Us NOTHING!
You know, Pluto had a good thing going until these stupid other transneptunian objects started to to clutter sky and make people turn on poor little Pluto. It's like being able exploit a flaw in a game. It works great for a while, but then a bunch of people do it and you're screwed.
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Many Veteran E-users May Joke Slashdot Upsets Nerds
Hail Eris! (Score:5, Funny)
Hail yes!
fnord.
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In classical fashion, Eris has upset the applecart by triggering an argument over whether calling Pluto a planet or not is the fairest decision. What is the gold standard?
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Ten tons of flax.
The not-so-littlest dwarf planet (Score:2)
"It's merely huge!"
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Still, nobody, nobody should say to Eris, "say, you been puttin' on mass?"...
Not disappointed - thank you (Score:2)
I came in here looking for this exact comment, and am not disappointed to see that One Of Us managed it on the third post.
Also funny that you are modded to 5. Fnord.
What can I say... (Score:4, Funny)
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If it's round (Score:2, Insightful)
This is just a classification problem. In my company, the secretary takes care of that shit. WHY ARE WE wasting our time with this crap? I don't give a shit if some schoolkid has to memorize dozens of planets. That's between him and his teacher.
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In any event, the "dwarf planet" classification is informative. Dwarf planets have sufficiently low mass that they have no managed to clear their orbital path from other massive objects. Their properties are very different, despite orbiting the sun and being round.
Why use a cluttered ontology when a clean one can be designed?
Re:Where is this "clean" ontology you speak of? (Score:5, Informative)
Pluto won't clear its orbital path in the lifetime of the sun for a few reasons. The Kuiper Belt (where Pluto resides) is a very excited region of the solar system in terms of orbital eccentricities and inclications, which results in a very high mean impact velocity between objects out there. This means impacts tend to be destructive rather than letting anything grow larger. Additionally the number of particles in the Kuiper belt is sufficiently small impacts are fairly rare. Basically, the Kuiper Belt never became a planet for much the same reason the asteroid belt hasn't.
Regarding the two planets bit, that's a highly unstable orbital configuration. If they orbited a common center of mass (like the Earth and moon) it would be feasible, but then we'd just call them a twin planetary system, or the smaller of the two would be considered a moon.
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Pluto won't clear its orbital path in the lifetime of the sun for a few reasons.
The key reason it won't clear it's orbital path is because the term is undefined. Yes, I know about the paper from which the term was borrowed. I also know that the IAU didn't adopt that definition.
Re:If it's round (Score:5, Interesting)
What, no distinction between round moons and non-round moons?
I think we need to have our system of classifications able to accurately distinguish between:
- Bodies of sufficient mass that they would undergo fusion if of fusionable composition (stars).
- Amongst those, ones which are of fusionable composition (active stars) versus those which no longer are (inactive stars).
- Amongst non-stars, bodies which are of sufficient mass to be approximately round (major planets) versus those which are not (minor planets or asteroids)
- Amongst planets, those which have an orbit centered on a star (regular planets) versus those which do not (irregular planets).
- Amongst irregular planets, those which have an orbit centered on another planet (moons) versus those which do not (asteroids).
Thus, Phobos and Deimos are minor irregular planets, and also moons (call them just "minor moons" since all moons are irregular planets); while similar bodies in the asteroid belt are also minor irregular planets, but are not moons but rather asteroids. Europa and Ganymede are a major irregular planets and also moons ("major moons"). Luna is a major moon. Eris and Pluto (if I understand the irregularity of their orbits correctly) are major irregular planets and also asteroids (or just "major asteroids", for all asteroids are irregular planets). Earth, Mars, etc are major regular planets, and schoolkids can memorize those and ignore the rest; for simplicity of terminology we can always assume "major" and "regular" unless specified otherwise, so "planet" alone refers just to bodies like those.
There now, everybody happy? Pluto is a planet; it's even a major planet; however, it's an irregular major planet and thus not a "planet" simpliciter.
Correction & Addendum (Score:2)
- Amongst non-stars, bodies which are of sufficient mass to be approximately round (major planets) versus those which are not (minor planets or asteroids)
Er, scratch that "asteroids" bit, that was written in error.
Also, it dawns on me that all non-stars are planets (though not planets simpliciter) by this system of classification, so, this line merely distinguishes between major and minor planets.
On that note, it would probably also be useful to distinguish first between bodies at rest upon other bodies (like me and this computer) versus bodies in freefall (like all the forgoing bodies), for I'm uncomfortable with myself being classified as either a star or
Gah, cut it out (Score:2, Insightful)
Why? The actual physical and astronomical facts about the matter, given our contemporary understanding of astronomy, do not depend on such a classification at all. The classification of the celestial objects is not a matter of convenience, not of fact. No astronomical fact follows independently from the "fact" that body X is classified as a Y in your scheme. That is, the only facts tha
Re:Gah, cut it out (Score:5, Interesting)
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Round moons are planets; non-round moons aren't. That was implicit, and no other distinction is needed. I basically agree with grandparent poster, and think that any system of categorization which claims that Mercury is more like Jupiter than it is Ceres is...utterly brain-dead.
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Yes, this is what I meant by a planet being a moon if it's orbit is centered on another planet; that meaning, if the point it orbits (the center of mass of the combined system) is
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Though that wasn't the OP's definition anyway, he was saying that anything orbiting the sun should be a planet. Not that I think there's a problem with that - we use his definition for moon, after all, there's no awkward requirements for "must be round" or "must be minimum mass" or "must clear its orbit". As long as we can identify a particular piece of rock, it gets labelled a moon.
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Halley's Comet orbits the sun in a highly elliptical orbit.
Asteroids orbit the sun.
Round man-made satellites could orbit the sun.
Slight stretch - If a moon breaks out of planetary orbit or the planet is destroyed, does the moon become a planet since it orbits the sun?
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Orbital bassassery! (Score:2)
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Re:If it's round (Score:5, Funny)
OK, look up. A little more to your left. A bit more. OK, just a little bit more. Nope, that's too far. Just a hair back to your right. There! See it?
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Would that do?
There are more, btw.
So let 'em both in (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:So let 'em both in (Score:5, Interesting)
Both bodies will continue to be studied, and when the time comes, they will be exploited for their natural resources.
This debate will only matter fifty years from now when we actually begin mining other planets and mining related laws discriminate between bodies with different scientific designations.
Regards.
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Sure, but the asteroid Ida has a moon, Dactyl [nasa.gov], as well, so I'm not sure that's useful criteria for planethood.
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Mercury and Mars are just too small to be counted (Ma
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Both are close enough to the sun and large enough to be fairly noticable.
It probably depends on what kind of planet the alien would find habitable/interesting/valuable. If their main interest lies in hot Jupiters, our solar system would get a "nothing interesting here, let's try the next one". If they're interested in the most massive objects, it would be "One sun, one smallish and one tiny
Reminder on the history of planethood (Score:2)
First, a quick response to your proposal: LOTS of things have moons. There are quite a few non-round asteroids (not big enough to gravitationally collapse) that have moons. In general, if any of us here in the peanut gallery have a proposed definition that sounds even vaguely plausible, it's a good bet that the professional astronomers have not only thought of it years ago, but also figured out solid reasons why it wouldn't work.
Speaking of asteroids, I'd like to remind everyone that for most of the 19th
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Plan Nine (Score:2)
You see? You see? Your stupid minds...stupid! Stupid!!
(Okay, so it's "Eris" and not "Eros". Sue me.)
Kuiper belt (Score:3, Insightful)
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Yeah, like finding Cthulhu there instead of the Pacific ocean. Then it won't be Neptune launching the rocks....
(ok, go for the Uranus jokes now)
every one knows . . . (Score:3, Informative)
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It's not like we could go there anyway... (Score:2)
Ah, astronomers... (Score:5, Funny)
but they also know the internal density distributions of extrasolar planets that barely take up a pixel on the most powerful telescopes.
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With the mass of Eris and Pluto, it was a relatively high precision measurement (for astronomers anyway). For the internal density profiles of planets, it's not a direct measurement---it's modeling of the data to argue for consistency with various models. So, to put it more accurately, they just measured the masses of Eris/Pluto correctly; but for the extrasolar planets, they considered various models consistent with the data and showed which one is most likely.
Generally the public does
Re:Ah, astronomers... (Score:4, Informative)
Those planets for which actual density has been determined are in a special class (or at least, special from our viewpoint):
These are planets which (a) pass in front of their star as seen from earth, thereby causing a slight dimming of the starlight seen from here, and (b) have sufficient mass to cause a measurable red/blueshift in the spectrum of their parent star.
The dimming of the light gives us their apparent diameter relative to their parent star, the duration of the dimming gives us a pretty accurate idea of the diameter of the star, the red/blueshift gives us their mass relative to their parent star and the orbital period gives us, to a considerable degree of accuracy, the mass of their parent star.
These four parameters are actual measurements, so since we can derive the actual mass & diameter of the planet from these four parameters quite easily, the average density value we derive is as close to a direct measurement as we'll get.
For planets which do not eclips their star as seen from earth, only lower limits to their mass can be determined (so the planet has to be "at least x earth masses") and even those do indeed depend on stellar modelling to determine the mass of the star, but since without the eclipses, there is currently no way to determine the diameter of said planet, there is no realistic way to determine the actual density of the planet anyway.
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Everyone? (Score:2, Informative)
What are you talking about? I haven't considered it a planet since I took astronomy in the early 90's. Of course the public didn't have a clue, but a lot of astronomers knew Pluto shouldn't be considered a (regular) planet.
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What you're describing is democratically defined knowledge. You must *love* Wikipedia.
Mistaken assumption (Score:5, Interesting)
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Dwarf Planet is so Politically Incorrect... (Score:5, Funny)
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spoiler alert! (Score:2, Funny)
Disinformation (Score:2)
I don't believe any statistic about a planetoid named after the Goddess of Disinformation.
"There's lies, damn lies, and statistics...and then there's Discordians."
What difference... (Score:2)
The physical and orbital characteristics of Pluto and Eris will remain the same regardless of whether we call them planets or min
Let me get this straight (Score:2)
It's somewhat large? Check
It even has it's own moon? Check
So why is this not considered a planet? I never understood why we demoted Pluto.
Classification (Score:2)
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Re:Pluto is still a planet (Score:4, Insightful)
Change can be hard.
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Pluto is still a big rock (Score:2)
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Only in Kansas! And, in their defense, that part of the world IS flat.
It was a nickname (Score:4, Informative)
Xena was never more than an unofficial nickname. No one, including the person who discovered it, ever intended for Xena and Gabrielle to be the official names for this pair of heavenly bodies.
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Huh? What are you talking about? Why would a reference to Xena: Warrior Princess be perceived as support for homosexuality?
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Re:It was a nickname (Score:4, Informative)
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Yeah, she could make his life hell for that!
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M = r * v^2 / G
The period of Eris' moon provides another way to calculate its mass.
Period T = 2pi * sqrt(r^3 / G*M)
Thus I imagine the various images of the moon provided a way to ca
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The orbit of the moon does depend on the mass of the moon.
The only time it's ignored is if the mass is negligible compared to the other body. So yah, the equations are right - but only in some cases (what do they say about a little knowledge being a dangerous thing?)
That may be the case here, I don't know. I didn't check for estimates of the mass of the moon of Eris.
But if the moon is large, then yes, you do have to take it's mass into account.
But
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Consistency is important in science.
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As an example I was watching some random evangelical show late one night (I had insomnia) while the main debate was going on. There was a
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But, even using your example, your example fails. If you knew anything about number theory you'd realize that 1 HAS to be treated as a special case in... many proofs.
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As for considering 1 a prime, I suppose that's a question of opinion, but it doesn't really obey enough properties of the primes to warrant that designation
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If they can be inconsistent for electrons, why can't they be for planets?
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I don't see the dust settled on this issue. Looks to me like the IAU will have to revisit this issue at the next meeting in 2009 (especially since the definition isn't well-defined). Who knows what a planet will be after that? And what's your reasoning for claiming Pluto "should" have never been a planet? In the case of the asteroids, four were found in quick succession. So it was known almost from the begining that there were several asteroids. More were found around thirty years later. In comparison, Plut
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Did you learn it before you were ten years old? If yes, it can not ever change.
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Personally, Pluto shouldn't be so down. It has confirmed land. Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus (or as it will later be known, Urectum), (and possibly Neptune) do not. "Hey Jupiter, I bet you can't wait to have someone land on you and plant a flag... oh, wait, that's right. YOU CAN'T!" "Hey, Saturn, look what I can do. Notic
Re:That planet is for gays. (Score:4, Funny)
"I've got moons that are bigger than you."
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To the ancient Greeks a "planet" was any appar