Hi, All,

   A much more detailed piece about the IAU
recommendation in The Boston Globe:
http://www.boston.com/news/science/articles/2006/08/16/nine_no_longer_panel_declares_12_planets/

   It contains an interview with Michael Brown which
is quite interesting. You'd think he'd be all for it, because of
2003UB313, but instead he says he doesn't favor it:

   "There are 53 objects that meet the panel's criteria and
probably many more to be discovered, according to
Michael Brown, an astronomer at the California Institute
of Technology who discovered 2003 UB313. The total
number of planets, Brown said, could easily climb above
100.
   A new panel of the astronomical union will be charged
with designating planets, and it will be its job to determine
if astronomers have proven that a particular body is
sufficiently round to qualify.
   A number of scientists said in interviews that they
expected the new definition would be accepted, but
others, including Brown, opposed the idea. Calling it
'a big mess,' Brown said he didn't like the complexity
of the system, or the idea of a panel determining
what new planets are."

   Another Committee...

   A check on the figures shows that the diameter of
Charon is just slightly great than 50% of the diameter
of Pluto, so perhaps that's the guideline for defining
a double planet...


Sterling K. Webb
----------------------------------------------------------------
----- Original Message ----- From: "Ron Baalke" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Meteorite Mailing List" <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, August 15, 2006 10:54 PM
Subject: [meteorite-list] 'Plutons' Push Planet Total Up To 12



http://news.scotsman.com/scitech.cfm?id=1194292006

'Plutons' push planet total up to 12
JOHN VON RADOWITZ
The Scotsman
August 15, 2006

A NEW kind of planet, the "pluton", could soon be taking its place in the
Solar System.

Astronomers have agreed on a draft proposal for redefining what
constitutes a planet.

If approved at a meeting underway in the Czech capital, Prague, school
science text books will have to be re-written.

The new definition would mean there are 12, not nine planets, and more
could be added to the list in the future.

They include eight "classic" planets - Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars,
Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune - Ceres, currently considered an
asteroid, and three "plutons," one of which is Pluto.

The other plutons are Charon, currently described as a moon of Pluto,
and the newly-discovered object 2003 UB313, which has not been named
officially, but is nicknamed Xena.

Ceres is the largest object in the asteroid belt between Mars and
Jupiter, and like a planet is spherical in shape.

A resolution to accept the new planet definition will be voted on by
members of the International Astronomical Union (IAU) next Thursday,
24 August. If passed, the days of simply learning the names of the
nine planets will be over for the world's schoolchildren. In future,
many more planets could join the Sun's family as other plutons are
discovered.

A dozen "candidate planets" are already on the IAUs "watchlist". They
include Varuna, Quaor and Sedna, all Pluto-like objects residing
within a region on the fringe of the Solar System known as the
"Kuiper Belt".

Plutons differ from classical planets in that they have orbits round
the Sun that take longer than 200 years to complete, and their orbits
are highly-tilted and non-circular.

All these characteristics suggest that they have an origin different
from that of classical planets.

The IAU has taken two years working out the differences between planets
and smaller Solar System bodies such as comets and asteroids.

IAU president Professor Ron Ekers said: "Modern science provides much
more knowledge than the simple fact that objects orbiting the Sun
appear to move with respect to the background of fixed stars.

"For example, recent new discoveries have been made of objects in the
outer regions of our Solar System that have sizes comparable to and
larger than Pluto.

"These discoveries have rightfully called into question whether or not
they should be considered as new 'planets'."

According to the new draft definition, two conditions must be satisfied
for an object to be called a "planet".

First, the object must be in orbit around a star, while not itself
being a star. Second, and most importantly, it must be massive enough
for its own gravity to pull it into a nearly spherical shape.

The IAU, responsible for the naming of planets and moons since 1919,
set up a Planet Definition Committee (PDC) to consider the problem.
Committee member Professor Richard Binzel said: "Our goal was to find a
scientific basis for a new definition of planet, and we chose gravity
as the determining factor.

"Nature decides whether or not an object is a planet."

Mnemonic needed

IF ASTRONOMERS decide to change the number of planets in our solar
system then piles of science textbooks will have to be rewritten.

Generations of children have learned the names of the planets using
mnemonics, listing the celestial bodies in their order from the Sun.

"My Very Eager Mother Just Sent Us Nine Pies" is one popular aide
memoir, helping students to remember Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars,
Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune and Pluto.

Other useful phrases include "Make Very Easy Mash - Just Squash Up
New Potatoes" and "My Very Easy Method Just Showed Us Nine Planets".


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