Scientists launch campaign to restore
Pluto to the planet club
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[March 22, 2017]
By Irene Klotz
(Reuters) - A team of scientists seeking to
restore Pluto to planethood launched a campaign on Tuesday to broaden
the astronomical classifications which led to its demotion to a "dwarf
planet" a decade ago.
Six scientists from institutions across the United States argued that
Pluto deserves to be a full planet, along with some 110 other bodies in
the solar system, including Earth's moon.
In a paper presented at an international planetary science conference at
The Woodlands, Texas, the scientists explained that geological
properties, such as shape and surface features, should determine what
constitutes a planet.
In 2006, the International Astronomical Union, struggling with how to
classify a newly discovered icy body beyond Pluto, adopted a definition
for a planet based on characteristics that include clearing other
objects from its orbital path.
Pluto and its newfound kin in the solar system's distant Kuiper Belt
region were reclassified as dwarf planets, along with Ceres, the biggest
object in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. The decision left
the solar system with eight planets.
But this definition sidelines the research interests of most planetary
scientists, said the paper's lead author, Kirby Runyon, a doctoral
candidate at Johns Hopkins University.
Runyon said he and other planetary scientists are more interested in a
planet's physical characteristics, such as its shape and whether it has
mountains, oceans and an atmosphere.
"If you're interested in the actual intrinsic properties of a world,
then the IAU definition is worthless," he said by phone.
Runyon and colleagues argue that the IAU does not have the authority to
set the definition of a planet.
"There’s a teachable moment here for the public in terms of scientific
literacy and in terms of how scientists do science," Runyon added. "And
that is not by saying, 'Let's agree on one thing.' That's not science at
all."
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Pluto nearly fills the frame in this image from the Long Range
Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI) aboard NASA's New Horizons spacecraft,
taken on July 13, 2015 when the spacecraft was 476,000 miles
(768,000 kilometers) from the surface. Courtesy NASA/Handout via
REUTERS
Runyon's group advocates for a sub-classification system, similar to
biology's hierarchal method. This approach would categorize Earth's
moon as a type of planet.
That idea irks California Institute of Technology astronomer Mike
Brown, who discovered the Kuiper Belt object that cast Pluto out of
the planet club.
"It really takes blinders to not look at the solar system and see
the profound differences between the eight planets in their stately
circular orbits and then the millions and millions of tiny bodies
flitting in and out between the planets and being tossed around by
them,” he wrote in an email.
(Editing by Letitia Stein and Leslie Adler)
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