Are you spamming or what?NO!! it should be called Kettlebell!!![]()
Are you spamming or what?NO!! it should be called Kettlebell!!![]()
I think Cassandra (spelt with a "C" to prevent confusion with 114 Kassandra) from "A Journey To Other Worlds" by John Jacob Astor IV might be a good name. The entire book is available online for free to read.
You know our Solar System is "weirder than you think" right? If Persephone/Planet Nine does not exist then we have no super-Earths...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.
So a lot of what we find outside of our system will be very hard to fit with the definition that we made up to fit our size. But if we get confirmation of a big body on the edge of ours, it's not as regular as we wanted it to be, and that will too be a challenge.
There already are 9 planets.![]()
Or we can just accept that astronomy is a science, not a nostalgia trip for your feelings, that it needs agreed upon, objective terminology which is applied consistently, and that that terminology can't include Pluto as a planet without also including a whole lot of other small bodies on the edge of the solar system, which no one wants to do.
Or we can just accept that astronomy is a science, not a nostalgia trip for your feelings, that it needs agreed upon, objective terminology which is applied consistently, and that that terminology can't include Pluto as a planet without also including a whole lot of other small bodies on the edge of the solar system, which no one wants to do.
And what's to stop them from deleting another body from planethood?
500 years ago, there were 6 planets.
100 years ago, there were 8.
When I was in school 40 years ago, there were 9.
Today, we're back down to 8.
Tomorrow, if scientists change their minds again, there could be 7, or 13, or whatever. And I expect you'll be just as insistent that there are eight, as I am that there are nine. Because that's how you learned it.
So if I choose to disagree with you, I'm stupid. You fire insults at me, and you ACTUALLY expect me to adopt your opinion because of it. How utterly pathetic.
Given that you immediately started firing off insults to my intelligence the moment I dared disagree with you, you do not have or deserve my respect. Ergo, I don't care what you think.
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