Real Clear Politics
 
Real Clear Science

 
 
 
February 28, 2015  
 
Pluto May Become a Planet Again
By _David  Weintraub_ 
(http://www.realclearscience.com/authors/david_weintraub/) 


Ceres is the largest object in the asteroid belt, and NASA’s _Dawn_ 
(http://dawn.jpl.nasa.gov/)  spacecraft will arrive at this dwarf  planet on 
March 
6, 2015. 
Pluto is the largest object in the Kuiper belt, and NASA’s _New Horizons_ 
(http://pluto.jhuapl.edu/)  spacecraft will arrive at this  dwarf planet on 
July 15, 2015.

 
These two events will make 2015 an exciting year for solar system 
exploration  and discovery. But there is much more to this story than mere 
science. I 
expect  2015 will be the year when general consensus, built upon our new 
knowledge of  these two objects, will return Pluto and add Ceres to our family 
of solar system  planets. 
The efforts of a very small clique of Pluto-haters within the International 
 Astronomical Union (IAU) plutoed Pluto in 2006. Of the approximately 
10,000  internationally registered members of the IAU in 2006, only 237 voted 
in 
favor  of the _resolution  redefining Pluto_ 
(http://www.iau.org/news/pressreleases/detail/iau0603/)  as a “dwarf planet” 
while 157 voted against; the 
other  9,500 members were not present at the closing session of the IAU 
General  Assembly in Prague at which the vote to demote Pluto was taken. Yet 
Pluto’s  official planetary status was snatched away. 
Ceres and Pluto are both spheroidal objects, like Mercury, Earth, Jupiter 
and  Saturn. That’s part of the agreed upon definition of a planet. They both 
orbit a  star, the Sun, like Venus, Mars, Uranus and Neptune. That’s also 
part of the  widely accepted definition of a planet. 
Unlike the larger planets, however, Ceres, like Pluto, according to the IAU 
 definition, “has not cleared the neighborhood around its orbit.” The 
asteroid  belt is, apparently, Ceres' neighborhood while the Kuiper Belt is 
Pluto
’s  neighborhood – though no definition of a planet’s neighborhood exists, 
and no  agreed upon understanding of what “clearing the neighborhood” yet 
exists.  Furthermore, no broad-based agreement exists as to why “clearing 
the  neighborhood” need be a requirement in order for an object to be 
considered a  planet.
 
Some planetary astronomers would argue that were the Earth placed in the  
Kuiper Belt, it would not be able to clear its neighborhood and thus would 
not  be considered, by the IAU definition, a planet; apparently location 
matters.  Here a planet, there not a planet. I’d argue that location shouldn’t 
matter;  instead, the intrinsic properties of the objects themselves should 
matter more.  And so we are led back to Ceres and Pluto. 
Never before visited by human spacecraft, Ceres and Pluto, as we will soon  
bear witness, are both evolving, changing worlds. Yesterday, Ceres and 
Pluto  were strangers, distant, barely known runt members of our solar system. 
By the  end of this calendar year, however, we will have showered both 
objects with our  passion and our attention, we will have welcomed them both 
into 
our embrace. And  we almost certainly will once again call both of them 
planets. 
Ceres, temporarily a planet

 
 
Ceres was discovered on New Year’s Day in 1801, by Italian astronomer  
Giuseppe Piazzi, a member of an international team of astronomers dubbed the  
Celestial Police, who were searching for a _supposedly missing planet_ 
(http://press.princeton.edu/titles/8247.html)   in between the orbits of Mars 
and 
Jupiter. When discovered, Ceres was  immediately recognized as a planet, the 
eighth one known at the time (neither  Neptune nor Pluto had been discovered 
yet). 
But within a few years, other objects in the asteroid belt were discovered  
and Ceres no longer seemed to stand out as far from the crowd. In 1802, the 
 great astronomer William Herschel suggested that Ceres and Pallas and any 
other  smaller solar system objects should be called asteroids – meaning 
star-like. In  telescope images, they were so tiny that they looked point-like, 
like stars,  rather than disk-like, like planets. And so, more than a 
century before Pluto  was discovered, Ceres was plutoed. 
 
Animation of rotating Ceres, made from a series of  images taken by NASA’s 
Dawn spacecraft on February 4, 2015, at a distance of  about 90,000 miles 
from the planet. NASA 
But Ceres does still stand out. It’s the largest asteroid, by far, nearly  
1,000 kilometers across (twice as large in diameter as Vesta, the second 
largest  asteroid), though not perfectly spherical in shape. 
As happened inside Earth and other planets, planetary scientists think that 
 long ago, the denser material in Ceres separated from the lighter material 
and  sank to form a core. 
Astronomers think Ceres is rich in water – as much as one-third of Ceres  
might be water – and may have a thin atmosphere. Bright, white spots on its  
surface might even be large frozen lakes. Ceres may, in fact, have as much 
fresh  water as Earth, have Earth-like polar caps, and might even have a 
sub-surface  liquid ocean layer, like Jupiter’s moon Europa and Saturn’s moon  
Enceladus.
 
Beginning this month, we’ll start to learn more about these tantalizing  
possibilities. With our increasing knowledge of and familiarity with Ceres, we 
 will no longer be able to identify meaningful criteria that will allow us 
to  continue to classify Ceres as not-a-planet. Ceres will continue to be a 
small  planet, but in 2015 we will come to understand that dwarf planets are 
planets,  too. 
Pluto’s short planetary reign

 
 
When Pluto was discovered by Clyde Tombaugh in 1930, many astronomers were  
certain that a large planet orbited the Sun beyond Neptune. Instead they 
found  Pluto, which turned out to be small compared to Earth and Neptune, 
though more  than double the size of Ceres, with a diameter of 2,300 kilometers.
 
 
Pluto also has an unusual orbit, as it crosses Neptune’s orbit, though it  
does so in such a way that it can never collide with Neptune. 
Pluto’s modern-day troubles began in 1992, when astronomers _David Jewitt  
and Jane Luu_ (http://www.cbat.eps.harvard.edu/iauc/05600/05611.html#Item1)  
discovered the first objects in the region of the solar system  now known 
as the Kuiper Belt. Whereas the asteroid belt where Ceres resides is  made 
mostly of house- and mountain-sized rocks that orbit the Sun in between the  
orbits of Mars and Jupiter, the Kuiper Belt is made mostly of house- and  
mountain-sized chunks of ice that orbit the Sun beyond the orbit of Neptune.  
Pluto, as it turns out, is one of the biggest objects in the Kuiper Belt. 
So what is Pluto?
 
Pluto is the last unexplored planet in our solar system. And the Kuiper 
Belt  may contain hundreds of other planetary worlds like Pluto. These may be 
the most  numerous worlds in the solar system; they may contain, together, 
the most total  surface area of all the solid-surfaced planets.
 
Pluto has one large moon, Charon, and at least four small moons: Nix, 
Hydra,  Kerberos and Styx. It has an atmosphere that expands and contracts as 
Pluto  warms and cools during its 248 year orbit around the Sun. The surface is 
likely  rich in water ice, enriched with methane and nitrogen and carbon 
monoxide  frosts; these ices might contain complex organic molecules. 
The New Horizons mission is poised to answer some of our myriad questions  
about Pluto. How did it form? What is the atmosphere made of? What is the  
surface like? Does Pluto have a magnetic field? What are the moons like? Does 
 Pluto have a subsurface ocean? Is the surface of Pluto’s moon Charon pure 
water  ice?
 
Pluto has guarded its secrets for four and half billion years. But in a few 
 months, a few intrepid humans will pull back the curtain on Pluto and say  
“Hello, Pluto, we’re here.” And Pluto will begin to share her secrets with 
us.  When she does, as with Ceres, our familiarity with Pluto will help us 
recognize  that Pluto is, was, and has always been a planet, albeit a small 
one. 
We only get to visit Ceres and Pluto for the very first time, once. This  
year. March 6 and July 15. In your lifetime. In this incredible year of the  
dwarf planet. Get ready to party. Ceres and Pluto are coming  home.

-- 
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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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