Planet Pluto Gets The Boot :sadwave:

Alex

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CNN.com - Pluto gets the boot - Aug 24, 2006

PRAGUE, Czech Republic (AP) -- Leading astronomers declared Thursday that Pluto is no longer a planet under historic new guidelines that downsize the solar system from nine planets to eight.

After a tumultuous week of clashing over the essence of the cosmos, the International Astronomical Union stripped Pluto of the planetary status it has held since its discovery in 1930.

The new definition of what is -- and isn't -- a planet fills a centuries-old black hole for scientists who have labored since Copernicus without one.

Pluto is no stranger to controversy. In fact, it's been dogged by disputes ever since its discovery. (Watch why some think planet size doesn't matter -- 3:39)

Discovered by Clyde Tombaugh of Arizona's Lowell Observatory, Pluto was classified as a planet because scientists initially believed it was the same size as Earth. It remained one because for years, it was the only known object in the Kuiper Belt, an enigmatic zone beyond Neptune that's teeming with comets and other planetary objects.

Pluto got an ego boost in 1978 when it was found to have a moon that was later named Charon. The Hubble turned up two more, which this past June were christened Nix and Hydra.

But in the 1990s, more powerful telescopes revealed numerous bodies similar to Pluto in the neighborhood. New observations also showed that Pluto's orbit was oblong, sending it soaring well above and beyond the main plane of the solar system where Earth and the other seven planets circle the sun.

That prompted some galactic grumbling from astronomers who began openly attacking Pluto's planethood.

At one point, things looked so bad for Pluto, the international union said publicly in 1999 that rumors of Pluto's imminent demise were greatly exaggerated and there were no plans to kick it out of the cosmic club.

A year later, the Hayden Planetarium at New York's American Museum of Natural History was accused of snubbing Pluto by excluding it from a solar system exhibition.

Pluto took another hit after Michael Brown of the California Institute of Technology discovered 2003 UB313, a slightly larger Kuiper Belt object. What's the point, some astronomers wondered, in keeping Pluto as a planet?

Its future brightened earlier this year, when NASA sent the New Horizons spacecraft to Pluto to get a closer look at the ball of rock and ice. The Hubble has managed to glimpse only its most prominent surface features; New Horizons, if all goes well, will arrive in 2015.

Bye, Pluto. :sadwave:
 
Ohhh...greatttt, we have to wait 'til the year 2015!! :lol:


Quite interesting and one that will obviously take me a while to consider that Pluto is no longer a part of our solar system and a planet.

On the other hand, we can still name the dog: Pluto...among other things, animals with that name...no need to stop just because a bunch of astronomers are! :lol:
 
Probably should wait till 2015 & get that closer look before they decide to take Pluto out of the solar system. It's a shame we have to wait that long. But just in case the evidence shows different in 2015. Why take it out now??
 
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Quite interesting and one that will obviously take me a while to consider that Pluto is no longer a part of our solar system and a planet.
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Er...it will be always a part of our solar system as it does orbit the sun. It just won't be considered a planet anymore. I have some reservations about their definition. Not all planets that orbit a star will be on the same plane as other planets. It think it needs to go back to the mass (size) definition not how it orbits.
 
and now what is my planet that will rule my scorpio?? I wonder?? (pluto rule my horscope) now its fucked up.. damn...
 
I believe it is still dispute. They might say Pluto will be pluton. There are few new plutons like Xena, Sedna, and few discoveries beyond Pluto. We will see the final. Damn I left my newspaper at work that was about the two different definitions of planet and pluton. For example I might say pluton is mini planet alike.
 
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From what I understand, Pluto is no longer in the "planet" category but some lesser category? Perhaps "dwarf planets" - dunno...

In any case, all of us need to start over in 3rd grade. :eek:

Gotta run, the school bus just pulled up. :D

Later! Dave
 
From what I understand, Pluto is no longer in the "planet" category but some lesser category? Perhaps "dwarf planets" - dunno...

In any case, all of us need to start over in 3rd grade. :eek:

Gotta run, the school bus just pulled up. :D

Later! Dave


LOL funny..hehe.. yeah guess we will find out later what it belong to? still weird.. we still havent see a pic of pluto yet?? till now.. and it showed 3 balls? gawd! i guess we will find out years later... :)
 
its now as a dwarf planet

Space Weather News for August 24, 2006
SpaceWeather.com -- News and information about meteor showers, solar flares, auroras, and near-Earth asteroids

Today, astronomers at the International Astronomical Union's General Assembly in Prague decided that the Solar System has eight planets, and Pluto is not one of them. Pluto has been declared a "dwarf planet." Joining Pluto in the dwarf planet category are giant asteroid Ceres and Pluto's cousin 2003 UB313. Get the full story at SpaceWeather.com -- News and information about meteor showers, solar flares, auroras, and near-Earth asteroids .


got this via email..
 
Er...it will be always a part of our solar system as it does orbit the sun. It just won't be considered a planet anymore. I have some reservations about their definition. Not all planets that orbit a star will be on the same plane as other planets. It think it needs to go back to the mass (size) definition not how it orbits.


Actually I had meant it isn't on the main plane, but well above and beyond the solar system. ;)
 
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Alex youre waving goodbye to a Planet? Thats a laugh,,The planet doesnt even know you.:lol: All this is about is a bunch of Liberal scientists claim that pluto wasnt a planet.I think NASA should talk to those scientists and put em up on a space shuttle and fly them to pluto It will take about 30 years to get there and 30 years to get back by that time they should be eligable for social security when they get back:giggle:
 
they already sent the rocket off to pluto.. it will get there in 15 yrs... we will know what Pluto look like etc.. but hopefully the battery wont run out by then..:eek3:
 
Now, I need to learn a new sentence to help me remember the planet names in order. I can't use this one anymore:

"Man very early made jugs serve useful, noble purposes."

First, they changed the pronunciation of Uranus; now they've given the boot to Pluto. What's next? :roll:
 
Now, I need to learn a new sentence to help me remember the planet names in order. I can't use this one anymore:

"Man very early made jugs serve useful, noble purposes."

First, they changed the pronunciation of Uranus; now they've given the boot to Pluto. What's next? :roll:

Unification of the Soviet Union?

Sorry, I couldn't resist. I had the same feeling when the Soviet Union broke apart. Very disorienting.
 
Space Weather News for August 24, 2006
SpaceWeather.com -- News and information about meteor showers, solar flares, auroras, and near-Earth asteroids

Today, astronomers at the International Astronomical Union's General Assembly in Prague decided that the Solar System has eight planets, and Pluto is not one of them. Pluto has been declared a "dwarf planet." Joining Pluto in the dwarf planet category are giant asteroid Ceres and Pluto's cousin 2003 UB313. Get the full story at SpaceWeather.com -- News and information about meteor showers, solar flares, auroras, and near-Earth asteroids .
got this via email..

Wow they even declared a giant asteroid as a dwarf planet at the same time they toss Pluto off the Solar System. I never thought of asteroid as either a full-on planet or dwarf-planet.

Makes me wonder what the astronomers were smoking when they came up with the 2 asteroids.

Now its gonna be hard for me to remember that Pluto is no longer a planet after being taught a lot about the solar system at school.
 
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