Pluto was a dwarf planet 3 years ago and New Horizons is on its way to Pluto. Will the mission bring Pluto back to planet status in 2015?
Pluto was a dwarf planet 3 years ago and New Horizons is on its way to Pluto. Will the mission bring Pluto back to planet status in 2015?
No. Why should it?
If the IAU decides it was a mistake to define it as a dwarf planet, they'll change their definition eventually. If not, they won't.
Well, we could show them it was a mistake. 5 minutes in a locked room with Jack Bauer would do.
Some people still live in the dark ages (or Illinois).Why so concerned about Pluto's status? it doesn't care!
These are the three properties an object has to meet in order to be classified as a planet:
- It has to be the primary body in orbit around the Sun (in other words, not a moon).
This is the major point. The fact that "there are many similar other bodies" in the local vicinity. This is why Ceres etc were demoted in the 1800s (there were over 25 at some point according to the font of all knowledge. As Fury says, this is exactly the same, except that now, because the whole-world-and-his-dog could listen, they had to come up with a formal definition as "suitably different" is still subjective.Did you know that in 1803, there were 13 planets?
They didn't know about Pluto back then, but astronomers started finding more objects in orbit around the Sun. One of them was called Planet Cares. Turns out that the vast majority of these bodies were small... really really small... so it was widely decided that these small bodies would be renamed to asteroids. This time it's no different... and trust me... the definition of the word "planet" will change in the future.
replace "the Sun" by "Stellar body"
The reason why we'll need a new definition for the word "planet" is because right now the same word describes a small rocky body and a gas giant with rings.
If I find a new planet, you're gonna ask me: Is is a ball of gas, a rock or a chunk of ice? How big is it? How massive is it? Does it have an atmosphere? Does it have rings? And so on...
We have good definitions for stars, even outside of the formal naming conventions... we have brown dwarfs, white dwarfs, yellow, red or blue stars, we have red giants and even hypergiants. Despite being unscientific, such words do pass on information. The word "planet" does not.
The only problem with that approach is that the Greeks also called the moon and the sun planets.