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The Pluto Controversy

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Juno 1804 (asteroid) Vesta 1807 (asteroid) Neptune discovered in 1846. Now are there 12 planets? ... Juno. Vesta. et al. Now we have reduced the number of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Pluto Controversy


1
The Pluto Controversy
http//apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
2
What is a Planet????
  • The problem is that astronomers have never
    defined what a planet is.

3
Some History
  • In ancient times there were seven planets
  • Moon
  • Mercury
  • Venus
  • Sun
  • Mars
  • Jupiter
  • Saturn

4
Some History
  • After Copernican revolution there were 6 planets
  • Mercury
  • Venus
  • Earth
  • Mars
  • Jupiter
  • Saturn

5
Some HistoryAsteroids were originally classed as
planets.
  • Uranus discovered in 1781
  • Ceres (asteroid)) discovered in 1801. It was
    assumed to be the missing planet between mars and
    Jupiter!
  • Pallas 1802 (asteroid)
  • Juno 1804 (asteroid)
  • Vesta 1807 (asteroid)
  • Neptune discovered in 1846
  • Now are there 12 planets?

6
Some History
  • By 1890 over 300 objects had been found orbiting
    between Mars and Jupiter and were being called
    minor planets or asteroids.

7
Some History
  • More planets were being discovered between Mars
    and Jupiter
  • New classification as asteroids
  • Ceres
  • Juno
  • Vesta
  • et al.
  • Now we have reduced the number of planets from 12
    to 8.
  • Therefore, in the past astronomers have
    reclassified objects from being planets to being
    something else.

8
Discovery of Pluto
  • March 13, 1930 by Clyde Tombaugh at Lowell
    Observatory (Percival Lowell).
  • 6 degrees from predicted location
  • Inclined 17 degrees from plane of Solar System
  • Assumed to be like the Earth

9
Plutos Moon
  • Charon discovered at USNO Flagstaff, AZ in July
    1978.
  • Pluto's mass 0.0021 Earth masses.
  • NOT SO EARTH LIKE!!!!!!
  • My teachers lied to me!!!!

10
Pluto is Strange
  • Orbit of Pluto comes inside orbit of Neptune.
  • Is Pluto an escaped moon of Neptune? Maybe and
    maybe not.

11
Pluto is Strange
  • Plutos obit is the most highly inclined orbit of
    all the planets.
  • i 17 degrees
  • Therefore, Neptune and Pluto can not collide.

http//pluto.jhuapl.edu/science/everything_pluto/1
6_plutoOrbit.html
12
Pluto is Strange
  • After discovery of Charon the mass of Pluto was
    determined to be 0.0021 times the Earths mass.

13
Pluto is Strange
http//solarviews.com/eng/pluto.htm
  • Pluto and Charon are about the size of the USA.

14
The Ort Cloud and Kuiper Belt
  • In 1950, Dutch astronomer Jan Oort hypothesized
    that comets came from a vast shell of icy bodies
    about 50,000 times farther from the Sun than
    Earth is. A year later astronomer Gerard Kuiper
    suggested that some comet-like debris from the
    formation of the solar system should also be just
    beyond Neptune.

http//www.solarviews.com/eng/kuiper.htm
15
Kuiper Belt
  • The Kuiper belt remained theory until the 1992
    detection of a 150-mile wide body, called 1992QB1
    at the distance of the suspected belt. Several
    similar-sized objects were discovered quickly
    confirming the Kuiper belt was real.

http//www.solarviews.com/eng/kuiper.htm
16
WW31
  • This illustration compares the orbit of the
    binary Kuiper Belt object, called 1998 WW31, with
    the orbits of Pluto and Neptune, the outermost
    solar system planets. The inset picture,
    consisting of six snapshots taken by NASA's
    Hubble Space Telescope, shows one member of the
    Kuiper Belt pair the faint white blobs during
    its elliptical orbit. The bright white object at
    the bottom of the oval is the other member of the
    pair.

17
Quaoar, an Icy World Far Beyond Pluto
  • Quaoar, an Icy World Far Beyond Pluto With the
    help of NASA's Hubble Space Telescope,
    astronomers have determined that 2002 LM60, an
    icy Kuiper belt object dubbed "Quaoar," by its
    discoverers, is the largest body found in the
    solar system since the discovery of Pluto 72
    years ago. Quaoar (pronounced kwa-whar) is about
    half the size of Pluto. Like Pluto, Quaoar dwells
    in the Kuiper belt.

18
Some Reasons Pluto may not be a Planet
  • Orbital inclination out of plane of Solar System
  • Other similar object found nearby that are
    considered Kuiper Belt objects.
  • Mass is very low (0.002) and more like that of a
    asteroid or comet than a planet.
  • Density is 0.373 times the Earths density.
  • Plutos size is closer to being an asteroid than
    a planet.

19
Explanation How many planets are in the Solar
System? This popular question now has a new
formal answer according the International
Astronomical Union (IAU) eight. Last week, the
IAU voted on a new definition for planet and
Pluto did not make the cut. Rather, Pluto was
re-classified as a dwarf planet and is considered
as a prototype for a new category of
trans-Neptunian objects. The eight planets now
recognized by the IAU are Mercury, Venus, Earth,
Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. Solar
System objects now classified as dwarf planets
are Ceres, Pluto, and the currently unnamed 2003
UB313. Planets, by the new IAU definition, must
be in orbit around the sun, be nearly spherical,
and must have cleared the neighborhood around
their orbits. The demotion of Pluto to dwarf
planet status is a source of continuing dissent
and controversy in the astronomical community.
20
What is a planet?
  • The IAU members gathered at the 2006 General
    Assembly agreed that a "planet" is defined as a
    celestial body that (a) is in orbit around the
    Sun, (b) has sufficient mass for its self-gravity
    to overcome rigid body forces so that it assumes
    a hydrostatic equilibrium (nearly round) shape,
    and (c) has cleared the neighbourhood around its
    orbit.

21
What is Pluto?
  • A new distinct class of objects called "dwarf
    planets" was also decided. It was agreed that
    "planets" and "dwarf planets" are two distinct
    classes of objects. The first members of the
    "dwarf planet" category are Ceres, Pluto and 2003
    UB313 (temporary name). More "dwarf planets" are
    expected to be announced by the IAU in the coming
    months and years. Currently a dozen candidate
    "dwarf planets" are listed on IAU's "dwarf
    planet" watch list, which keeps changing as new
    objects are found and the physics of the existing
    candidates becomes better known.
  • The "dwarf planet" Pluto is recognized as an
    important proto-type of a new class of
    trans-Neptunian objects. The IAU will set up a
    process to name these objects.

22
The Redefined Solar System
  • Pluto demoted to a dwarf planet.
  • Ceres promoted to dwarf planet and NOT an
    asteroid.
  • I guess we are making this stuff up as we go.

23
Nature of Science
  • Science is tentative.
  • Science is created by humans using logical
    reasoning and creativity.
  • Scientific knowledge is our best logical guess
    and may change as needed.
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