[Assam] Definition of a Planet

Ram Sarangapani assamrs at gmail.com
Mon Aug 14 13:00:01 PDT 2006


The definition of what a planet is, has all of a sudden become hazy and
difficult. This story from CNN/AP seems to put the cosmos in confusion.

Wonder what will happen to our own "Nobogroxoh". Some say they could be as
many a 53 planets.

--Ram

Pluto on the chopping block
Astronomers meet to define 'planet'

Monday, August 14, 2006; Posted: 10:32 a.m. EDT (14:32 GMT)

   [image: story.pluto.moon.drawing.jpg] An illustration of Pluto,
foreground, and its satellite Charon. Two tiny new moons were discovered in
October.
 *Image:*
 *PRAGUE, Czech Republic (AP) -- Nearly 2,500 astronomers from 75 countries
gathered in Prague Monday to come up with a universal definition of what
qualifies as a planet and possibly decide whether Pluto should keep its
planet status.*

For decades, the solar system has consisted of nine planets, even as
scientists debated whether Pluto really belonged. Then the recent discovery
of an object larger and farther away than Pluto threatened to throw this
slice of the cosmos into chaos.

Among the possibilities at the 12-day meeting of the International
Astronomical Union in the Czech Republic capital: Subtract Pluto or christen
one more planet, and possibly dozens more.

But the decision won't be an easy one. Scientists attending the conference
are split over whether Pluto should be excluded from the list of planets,
Pavel Suchan of the meeting's local organization committee said.

"So far it looks like a stalemate," Suchan said. "One half wants Pluto to
remain a planet, the other half says Pluto is not worth being called a
planet."

Participants hope to set scientific criteria for what qualifies as a planet.
Should planets be grouped by location, size or another marker? If planets
are defined by their size, should they be bigger than Pluto or another
arbitrary size? The latter could expand the solar system to 23, 39 or even
53 planets.

The debate intensified last summer when astronomer Michael Brown of the
California Institute of Technology announced the discovery of a celestial
object larger than Pluto. Like Pluto, it is a member of the Kuiper Belt, a
mysterious disc-shaped zone beyond Neptune containing thousands of comets
and planetary objects. Brown nicknamed his find "Xena."

The Hubble Space Telescope measured the bright, rocky object officially
known as 2003 UB313, at about 1,490 miles (2,300 kilometers) in diameter,
roughly 70 miles (112 kilometers) longer than Pluto. At 9 billion miles (15
kilometers) from the sun, it is the farthest known object in the solar
system.

The discovery stoked the planet debate that had been simmering since Pluto
was spotted in 1930.

For years, Pluto's inclusion in the solar system has been controversial.
Astronomers thought it was the same size as Earth, but later found it was
smaller than Earth's moon. Pluto is also odd in other ways: With its
elongated orbit and funky orbital plane, it acts more like other Kuiper Belt
objects than traditional planets.

Some argue that if Pluto kept its crown, Xena should be the 10th planet by
default -- it is, after all, bigger. Purists maintain that there are only
eight traditional planets, and insist Pluto and Xena are poseurs.

Still others suggest a compromise that would divide planets into categories
based on composition, similar to the way stars and galaxies are classified.
Jupiter could be labeled a "gas giant planet," while Pluto and Xena could be
"ice dwarf planets."

A decision on whether Pluto should be excluded or if "Xena" should be
included on the list of planets will not be known before the end of the
conference, Suchan said.

"We of course need the definition of a planet first."
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