Pluto. Asteroid, planet or comet?

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weixing
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Post by weixing »

Hi,
like what you said, mercury used to be the lower limit of planet size, now it's pluto.
If you ask any astronomer: what is a planet?? I think not all of them will give you the same answer... I think the most common answer is that a planet must rotate around a star and must be "large". Ya... the moon is larger than pluto! So who knows what that "large" mean!

Anyway, there are a lots of this type of gray area in astronomy. Hope astronomers can come out with a new definition of what is a planet.

Have a nice day.
Yang Weixing
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Post by AGMI »

Mesoplanet MESOPLANET!!
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Post by A 5 YeaR Old »

i dont think there will be a clear definition for a planet, most common people would be too reluctant to have pluto demoted to a planetoid.

Honestly, i think that pluto is simply a planetoid (or a mesoplanet as AGMI called it). Its elliptical orbit makes its status questionable. Size doesnt matter much though. It is probably the mistake of the IAU to crown pluto as a planet in the race for more planets and they arent gonna admit it too soon, even the church took quite a long time to recitify galileo......
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Post by carlogambino »

Actually its not what NASA say,its what IAU say. What IAU say, we follow lor. Currently, IAU has no plan to 'demote' pluto or 'promote' objects like Ceres.
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Post by AGMI »

Lets see..Pluto Has an atmosphere compisition like that of a comet and follows an elliptical orbit..imagine if somehow it's orbit gets pulled in till it becomes a sungraver :o what a spectacle
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Post by zong »

This is my opinion on the matter, does not represent the truth!

Until now there still isn't a "lower limit" for planets. Pluto still isn't recognised as the lower limit, not yet anyway.

I think that Pluto was discovered and first named a planet when we did not realise that there are other planetoids around. It therefore should still remain known as a planet. If renamed, it might create an uproar among the astronomy community. I think by letting our past mistakes live as an exception is a better way to handle this situation. For Sedna and the newer found whatever-you-call-them, yea I agree tho follow the IAU, and they are agreeing on calling them planetoids right? So I follow.
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Post by A 5 YeaR Old »

AGMI wrote:Lets see..Pluto Has an atmosphere compisition like that of a comet and follows an elliptical orbit..imagine if somehow it's orbit gets pulled in till it becomes a sungraver :o what a spectacle
you mean sungrazer? I dont think it will happen though, Neptune only causes it to wobble a bit due to the distance between them. Even if all the planets were to line up and pull at pluto, it only results in stronger wobbling i think..
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Post by Grievous »

Even if the planets all line up, the net gravitational pull will be negilible. Whether if its a planet whatsoever, i cant see it in my telescope, i don't care. :P

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Post by AGMI »

nola i mean just use yer imagination [ like the big purple dinosaur teaches us ] huge comet hehehe
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Post by weixing »

Hi,
By September 2006, our Solar System will go through a "man-made disaster event"... This event might change our Solar System forever and we might "lost" our planet Pluto or suddenly had a few more planets... err... at least on paper... ha ha ha :P :P :P More detail:
http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/0 ... ition.html

Finally, IAU are going to decide whether pluto is a planet or not, so by September 2006, we might have 8, 10 or more planets!! Also, the IAU are going to officially defining the word "planet"... :) :) Now we had a standard answer when someone ask us what is a planet... hee hee :)

Hmm... Just wonder will all those primary and secondary school student require to take their science paper again if pluto lost it planetary status?? ha ha ha :P :P :P

Have a nice day.
Yang Weixing
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