Winner
Diverse in Unity
Bozo Erectus said:Yeah but then they'll take a vote and call it a 'differently sized planet of color'.
Well, if Nemesis existed, it would have to be very, very large.
Bozo Erectus said:Yeah but then they'll take a vote and call it a 'differently sized planet of color'.
Because theres no point in belonging to the oh so prestigious International Astronomical Union if you cant tell billions of people to throw out all of their science books.Gelion said:Why not keep things status quo?
Well, having to classify an object larger then Pluto sort of throws a wrench in the worksGelion said:Why not keep things status quo?
Not exactlyMarla_Singer said:I'm not an astronomist but doesn't (a) implies (d) ?
"Stable in not sexy" - Mr. Garibaldy, Babylon 5, last episodeWinner said:Because the status quo is not good?![]()
So is a soccer ball a planet ? After all, it's round and is in orbit around the sun...Perfection said:Not exactly
You can see here that both moon paths (purple) go around the orbit of its planet but in the case of the latter it appears from an observer stationary relatvie to the sun to be going mostly in a circular orbit around the sun with some swaying back and forth across the planet's orbital path (this is the case with our moon). So in a way you can think of it as mostly orbiting the sun from that perspective. However no perspective makes it not a satellite of the planet.
Marla_Singer said:So is a soccer ball a planet ? After all, it's round and is in orbit around the sun...
j/k
Xena is a smidge larger then Pluto, the other two objects in the propoed were Ceres which is rather small compared to Pluto (about 1/10 the mass and 1/12 the volume) and Charon (Pluto's "Moon") which is about 1/5 the mass/volume of Pluto.Gelion said:Thanks Perfection, although having to rewrite the astronomy books is more of pain than including one little line on "history of exploration". How big are the other two objects?
Earth is master of its orbital domain, Pluto is not. Earth keeps the swath of space it orbits around nice tidy and free of debris, Pluto wallows in the filth of other objects.Sims2789 said:Why is Earth a planet? The differences between it and the Jovians are than that between Earth and the Plutonian planets?
That's the plan. These things are called "dwarf planet" the important thing is that a "dwarf planet" is not a "planet". "Dwarf planets" according to the IAU (and then shown on wikipedia) are bodies that aren't "planets" because they aren't masters of thier orbital domain but retain the other features (direct solar orbit, rounded by gravity)Sims2789 said:Why not just call Pluto, 2003 UB313, etc. "dwarf planets", like Wikipedia's doing?
It does in there definition because it has been rounded by gravity.Sims2789 said:Ceres shouldn't even cut it as a dwarf planet, though.
Sims2789 said:Ceres shouldn't even cut it as a dwarf planet, though.
Hey, we never stopped! This is just a PR stunt to get more attention so we can study them even more! KBO= Kick-Butt Objects!croxis said:Can we just go back to studying these things instead of arguing what to call them? =P
The chief reason is sheer gravitational clout. As Perf says, the terrestrials and jovians dominate their orbital regions in a way no other objects in the solar system can. Another similarity is that both have (or are believed to have) large amounts of metal in their cores, whereas the plutonians are made up chiefly of ices and silicates.Sims2789 said:Why is Earth a planet? The differences between it and the Jovians are than that between Earth and the Plutonian planets?
Can you tell me what does "remove everything in its orbital path" mean ? For instance, the Earth has the Moon around it... I feel there is something that isn't said but is very important to understand. L4 and L5 are Lagrange points at -120° and +120° on the orbital path, like for some Jovian asteroids ??Perfection said:Yeah, that's why my definition which is a little more complex I view is better, but it's a small quibble as any planet will remove just about everything in its orbital path except at it's L4 and L5 points.
My very educated mother just said "Uh, no."Lithgon said:Mary Virginia eats many jam sandwiches under Ned's Porch.
Now it has to be...
Mary Virginia eats many jam sandwiches under Ned
Well take the asteroid belt for instance, it's a whole bunch of small bodies all over the place within a certain distance from the sun. The orbits of the planets are different, there are not small bodies all over the orbital locus. Rather, all but a small amount of bodies in unstable orbits have either been ejected from the area or given some special stable orbital relationship with the planet, these include orbiting with the planet at the L4 or L5 points, becoming a captured moon, going into a resonance orbit or going into a horseshoe orbit.kryszcztov said:Can you tell me what does "remove everything in its orbital path" mean ? For instance, the Earth has the Moon around it... I feel there is something that isn't said but is very important to understand. L4 and L5 are Lagrange points at -120° and +120° on the orbital path, like for some Jovian asteroids ??