Message boards :
Science (non-SETI) :
Pluto is a Planet!
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Julie Send message Joined: 28 Oct 09 Posts: 34060 Credit: 18,883,157 RAC: 18 |
A post from Senator I copied from the T-shirts thread per Uli's request. In this thread we can discuss why Pluto is or isn't a planet. For me, it most definitely is. Uli, a comment. rOZZ Music Pictures |
Bob DeWoody Send message Joined: 9 May 10 Posts: 3387 Credit: 4,182,900 RAC: 10 |
I too, agree that Pluto should be classified as a planet but the radius, in miles, of Pluto is 733 miles. The figures you quoted were the diameter of Pluto and the radius of Mercury. Bob DeWoody My motto: Never do today what you can put off until tomorrow as it may not be required. This no longer applies in light of current events. |
William Rothamel Send message Joined: 25 Oct 06 Posts: 3756 Credit: 1,999,735 RAC: 4 |
If you want to consider Pluto to be a planet, then it should be classified as an ICY PLANET along with the other icy planets that we have found and will find that are as big or bigger. This should fit in with the previous designations of: Rocky planets (Inner) Gas planets (Outer giants) Icy planets (Far out dwarfs) This shouldn't offend anyones' sensibilities and should ease the arguments. As time and technology move on we will find more and more of the latter. We may even choose to consider members of the Oort cloud to be far out icy asteroids (potential comets) Perhaps we will find that this pattern exists for other "solar systems" |
Julie Send message Joined: 28 Oct 09 Posts: 34060 Credit: 18,883,157 RAC: 18 |
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rob smith Send message Joined: 7 Mar 03 Posts: 22526 Credit: 416,307,556 RAC: 380 |
Sig line says it all... Bob Smith Member of Seti PIPPS (Pluto is a Planet Protest Society) Somewhere in the (un)known Universe? |
Julie Send message Joined: 28 Oct 09 Posts: 34060 Credit: 18,883,157 RAC: 18 |
If you want to consider Pluto to be a planet, then it should be classified as an ICY PLANET along with the other icy planets that we have found and will find that are as big or bigger. This should fit in with the previous designations of: An Icy planet, but still... A Planet. rOZZ Music Pictures |
SciManStev Send message Joined: 20 Jun 99 Posts: 6658 Credit: 121,090,076 RAC: 0 |
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuiper_belt I personally don't care one way or the other, but the Kuiper belt has over 1000 known objects, and as many as 100,000 total objects. Is size the only parameter that designates Pluto as a planet among 100,000 similar objects? What about Haumea and Makemake? Steve Warning, addicted to SETI crunching! Crunching as a member of GPU Users Group. GPUUG Website |
Julie Send message Joined: 28 Oct 09 Posts: 34060 Credit: 18,883,157 RAC: 18 |
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Dimly Lit Lightbulb 😀 Send message Joined: 30 Aug 08 Posts: 15399 Credit: 7,423,413 RAC: 1 |
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuiper_belt Huh, I've learned something new today, "plutinos" and orbital resonance. Interesting, thanks :) And yes Pluto is a planet :) Member of the People Encouraging Niceness In Society club. |
KLiK Send message Joined: 31 Mar 14 Posts: 1304 Credit: 22,994,597 RAC: 60 |
Put it cleanly: prove that Pluto is a solar body & it can be planet again...till then it's a planetoid that Sun collected so long ago! ;) non-profit org. Play4Life in Zagreb, Croatia, EU |
Julie Send message Joined: 28 Oct 09 Posts: 34060 Credit: 18,883,157 RAC: 18 |
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Bob DeWoody Send message Joined: 9 May 10 Posts: 3387 Credit: 4,182,900 RAC: 10 |
Put it cleanly: prove that Pluto is a solar body & it can be planet again...till then it's a planetoid that Sun collected so long ago! ;) I don't understand your question. No one that I know of has argued that Pluto wasn't part of the gaseous cloud that formed into the solar system. It has been here from the beginning of the solar system 4.5 billion years ago. Pluto is what it is regardless of what we call it. By many people's definition it is a planet. By the definition of a small but influential group of astronomers it is what they call a planetoid. When does a pebble become a rock? Bob DeWoody My motto: Never do today what you can put off until tomorrow as it may not be required. This no longer applies in light of current events. |
tullio Send message Joined: 9 Apr 04 Posts: 8797 Credit: 2,930,782 RAC: 1 |
If I remember, the plane of Pluto' s orbit is inclined with respect to the orbital plane of the other planets, which derives from a disk. Also, its eccentricity is greater with respect to the other planets.This makes people think that Pluto is a captured asteroid. Two spacecrafts are now approaching Pluto and Ceres, the biggest known asteroid, discovered by Father Giuseppe Piazzi, a Jesuit astronomer, in 1801. The first is Dawn, approaching Ceres, which should go in orbit around it. The New Horizon spacecraft should reach Pluto on July 14 2015. Maybe we should wait for its analysis of the Pluto environment before deciding about its rank in the Solar System. Tullio |
Bob DeWoody Send message Joined: 9 May 10 Posts: 3387 Credit: 4,182,900 RAC: 10 |
Pluto could just as easily been smacked during the initial building of the solar system and knocked out of the orbital plane shared by the rest of the planets. Uranus rotates in a retrograde direction and is tipped on it's side. Is it a captured body? Bob DeWoody My motto: Never do today what you can put off until tomorrow as it may not be required. This no longer applies in light of current events. |
Julie Send message Joined: 28 Oct 09 Posts: 34060 Credit: 18,883,157 RAC: 18 |
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tullio Send message Joined: 9 Apr 04 Posts: 8797 Credit: 2,930,782 RAC: 1 |
Venus is also retrograde, according to Fred Hoyle. Tullio |
Julie Send message Joined: 28 Oct 09 Posts: 34060 Credit: 18,883,157 RAC: 18 |
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Julie Send message Joined: 28 Oct 09 Posts: 34060 Credit: 18,883,157 RAC: 18 |
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Julie Send message Joined: 28 Oct 09 Posts: 34060 Credit: 18,883,157 RAC: 18 |
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KLiK Send message Joined: 31 Mar 14 Posts: 1304 Credit: 22,994,597 RAC: 60 |
Venus is also retrograde, according to Fred Hoyle. Well, it's not...orbit & exentricity says it isn't! ;) non-profit org. Play4Life in Zagreb, Croatia, EU |
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