"Persephone" isn't Roman.
"Persephone" isn't Roman.
I miss PlutoPlutoo.
I'm pretty sure there are more than eight planets in the entire universe.There can't be a ninth planet in the solar system. A planet is an astronomical body orbiting the Sun that is massive enough to be rounded by its own gravity, and has cleared its neighbouring region of planetesimals. Any object distant enough to not yet be detected, or at the projected distances for the purported “planet”, would be too far to have already cleared its neighbourhood of planetesimals – and even if it had, we wouldn't be ever able to confirm it, if we weren't able to detect the body in the first place. If a blue Saturn orbits the sun at a distance of light year, it wouldn't be a planet. A ninth planet, or extrasolar planets, or any such, do not exist by definition. There are eight planets in the universe in total.
If you see any issue with that, take it up with the IAU.
It might be smart they excluded extrasolar planets from the definition from the get-go, because our solar system is boringly regular. But the remaining planetary systems can be insane – simple things like double planets are probably very common, planets have crazy orbits, orbiting the wrong way, can be affected by multiple stars, planets can be orbits titled degrees off the star system plane (probably way more), planets can orbit at 650 AU, their orbits almost touch each other, and Ethan Siegel might be right about small planets orbiting at the Lagrange points of massive planets. Heck, I can't find the article, but I also read about a three extrasolar planets that orbited in a configuration that doesn't fit with the definition of an orbit.What a dumb, unscientific reason.
I think there's a rule against naming things after established practising religions , so Hinduism is out of the question.I would personally prefer saving other pantheons for other solar systems. Maybe we can call the planets we eventually settle around Trappist-1 or Proxima Centauri or Luyten's Star after Hindu, Norse, Aztec, etc.
Trappist-1: Brahma, Vishnu (moons: Rama, Krishna, etc), Shiva, etc.
I think it might be an asteroid , but pretty certain there already is one too. In fact, I seem to remember the name being mooted when 2003-UB313? (or whatever the designation was for what is now Eris) was first announced in 2005, as it was already in use for something.I think Persephone might already be taken, as one of the moons (I don't recall which planet).
I think it might be an asteroid , but pretty certain there already is one too. In fact, I seem to remember the name being mooted when 2003-UB313? (or whatever the designation was for what is now Eris) was first announced in 2005, as it was already in use for something.
Let's not bring pseudoscience into this.Oh, and I'm sure a lot of people would want this to be called Nibiru even though it would not fit the literal definition of what new agers think of it.
I'd call it "Bob". Fuck the Romans.
December (the 12th month) translates to 'the 10th month'. Ditto November ('9th month'), October ('8th') and September ('7th'). Doesn't really cause any problems I'm aware of.
- Terminus - not a good idea as it translates as "the last one" - it'd be a bit awkward if there turned out to be one (or several) beyond it
Because it would cause confusion.I don't know why can't another planet be called Persephone?
Most people don't know enough Latin to say, "Hey, waitaminute, this doesn't make any sense...".December (the 12th month) translates to 'the 10th month'. Ditto November ('9th month'), October ('8th') and September ('7th'). Doesn't really cause any problems I'm aware of.
There are rogue planets that somehow got knocked out of their original home and just float around aimlessly. This "planet" may be one these that has been subsequently captured, hence it lurks on the outermost rim with an incredibly slow and wide orbit. Does it really matter if it didn't form from the original protoplanetary disk? It's still a heck of a lot closer than our nearest stellar neighbor.
Oh, and I'm sure a lot of people would want this to be called Nibiru even though it would not fit the literal definition of what new agers think of it.
I would like Miranda
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