There wouldn't be a debris field if the object was dominating the orbit.
And don't use an artist to conduct scientific research. Or a lawyer to perform brain surgery. Any other non sequiturs?
Actually I just meant that the digs at scientists weren't relevant to the discussion. Literally, they did not follow from the rest of the discussion.
It's not just that, it's a form of formal fallacy...the reason it often stands in the place of "nonsense" is because in formal debate it's used when ever the premise and conclusion do not jibe. But laymen have used it for a general sense of nonsense which muddies the proper meaning.Non sequitur is Latin for "does not follow". Anyway, this tangent is way off topic.
On topic, what is your objection to the requirement that planets clear their orbit?
http://www.iau.org/public_press/news/detail/iau0603/Yes it is. In exactly the same way that a dwarf star (.e.g. the Sun) is still a star. There are only two kinds of people who claim this means pluto is "not a planet": Science-channel attention whores speaking primarily in sarcasm, and newspaper/magazine science writers who don't know asteroids from aspercreme.
No, it's not. You took that part of the definition out of context. The resolution specifically says that they are defining what constitutes a planet in the Solar System, meaning that the listed points (including the one above) have no context in regards to extrasolar planets.Number two is a REALLY good point2. It says “in orbit around the Sun”, automatically excluding extrasolar planets. It could have said, dunno, in orbit around a star? Most planets in the universe don't orbit the Sun. I think.
... like I said...that doesn't define dwarf either.
Dominating an orbit means nothing to size if you're in a debris field.
My uncle used to say that scientists can unlock the mysteries of the universe, but they cannot account for the existence of lawyers.Note: Don't use scientist to draw up a legal contract or any legislature....
Yes they are. And both are subsets of "celestial objects."Nothing, but when “dwarf” is used as an adjective, the compound term is supposed to be a subset of the general term. But dwarf planets are not a subset of planets.What's wrong with adjectives?
And your research paper on how this is possible will be published in scientific journals... when?I do believe that double planets are stable.
Then you need to ask somebody OTHER than an astronomer.Yes planets! I want a word to describe planet-like objects such as gas giants, terrestrial planets, dwarf planets and spherical moons.Should new words be coined for all the different types of objects that orbit stars? Maybe.![]()
Yes they are. And both are subsets of "celestial objects."
I suppose, like porn, a planet is hard to define, but you can definitely recognize it when you see it.
I actually agree, personally I preferred "planetoid" as a category. Unfortunately, the IAU didn't listen to me, but it doesn't mean I should get my knickers in a twist about it. (I'm also for a narrower definition of what is a moon, formulated as "a natural satellite which is nearly spherical in shape due to self-gravity". That would make, for example, Deimos and Phobos natural satellites, but not moons. I suppose some people would be enraged at that, too.)“Dwarf planetoid” or simply “planetoid” would have been a lot better.
I don't see the problem with that. There are dwarf giant stars, giant dwarf galaxies, and all kind of arguably linguistically funny stuff out there. It doesn't matter one iota to people actually working on them.* The definition seems to imply the existence of gas giant dwarf planets, I kid you not.
I see no problem with that.* The definition means that the Earth was first a proto-planet, then a dwarf planet and then a planet.
As for physical characteristics, you are right. But the definition focus on orbital features, not physical size or composition. It might be not your favourite definition, but it's valid nonetheless, and the one the IAU chose for itself (since, you know, they actually work on them).Terrestrial planets and dwarf planets are as close as you can get, they are closer than a terrestrial planet and a gas giant planet are.
But internet mooks are apparently a-ok. Funny that.Note: Don't use scientist to draw up a legal contract or any legislature....
Bottom line: generally speaking, all labels are arbitrary. Nature abhors a vacuum, and except for quantum mechanics, you will find a continuum of scales from small to large. For our convenience, it's useful to set the cut off at some point, by whatever definition we find use useful. The IAU decided for a definition that made sense for the work their members. So far, all the complaints I heard from "armchair astronomers" are because they feel somehow entitled to keep the same list of planet they had on their textbook in grade school.The problem was the Pluto was clearly not the only object out there, that there were many similar objects out there, and that calling Pluto a planet but not calling Eris one, or any other similar object out there a planet, was arbitrary. If the classification of objects comes off as arbitrary, too, well that's because reality just isn't tidy.
Except it didn't, it simply established the definitions of "planet" and "dwarf planet" and defined Pluto as the latter.Yes they are. And both are subsets of "celestial objects."
I pasted an IAU link that said exactly the opposite earlier on.
Yes and no. It's a dwarf planet, which is a new type of planet defined by the IAU as a spherical object that hasn't cleared its own orbital neighborhood.P.S. You seem to be claiming that Pluto is actually a planet even with the new definition
We'll be seeing Ceres even sooner, and I can make the exact same promise in that case.Shh... We'll all be seeing Pluto in a little less than 4 years, and I promise you that everyone who sees it will tell you that it's a planet.
The reason the definition was changed is because the OLD definition would have inevitably applied to dozens if not hundreds of other objects within the solar system in the Kuiper belt and the main asteroid belt. This means you either accept the idea that the solar system consists of some thirty to fifty "planets" of various sizes and compositions and then make some sort of really arbitrary distinction between "major and minor planets," OR, you can come up with a decisive unambiguous definition that separates "normal" planets from the weird little ones we're bound to discover by the truckload.I do not actually care if Pluto is a planet or not really, though it makes more sense to me if it is. I think the distinction is a bit arbitrary, because I do not see why orbital characteristics (like gravitationally dominance) should be that vital for the definition.
So why is gravitational dominance an important characteristic of a planet, and why does it make it obvious that a planet that has it is a planet when you see it?
First of all, there's no such thing as a "debris field" in real astronomy. Objects of similar size and mass will either orbit each other and form a system (e.g. trojan asteroids, Jupiter's dozens of captured moons, Saturns rings, etc) or they clump together and form a single object (e.g. various "gravel pit" asteroids in the belt).
de·bris/dəˈbrē/Noun
1. Scattered fragments, typically of something wrecked or destroyed.
2. Loose natural material consisting esp. of broken pieces of rock.
9. a wide or open expanse:
The reason size matter is indeed a technicality, but only because none of the possible exceptions to the rule--i.e. two major planets sharing the same orbit but on opposite sides of each other--do not exist in our solar system. So we're stuck with the working definition here such that the "planet" is THE dominant gravitational body in that particular orbit and has no other competitors along the same orbit. This cannot be said for, say, Ceres or Pluto; although they are spherical and free-floating, they exert less gravitational influence over neighboring objects than other planets in the same/adjacent orbits.
My uncle used to say that scientists can unlock the mysteries of the universe, but they cannot account for the existence of lawyers.
No, it's not. You took that part of the definition out of context. The resolution specifically says that they are defining what constitutes a planet in the Solar System, meaning that the listed points (including the one above) have no context in regards to extrasolar planets.
I suppose, like porn, a planet is hard to define, but you can definitely recognize it when you see it. Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars are planets. So are Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. Ceres and Pluto, though...well, they're not alone and they're not much different than other bodies sharing the orbital space, so they're something else, part of a family of not-quite-planets.
If your objection is in the wording of the definition, it's possible to update it eventually.
If you're looking to retain Pluto as a planet for nostalgic reasons, though, I'm afraid you're out of luck.![]()
This only makes matters worse then. All I can do is imagine the following conversation:I'll say it again: they did it to avoid confusing school children.
What the fuck does that mean?You can't really spare the kids from teaching them about those numerous objects, because they need to know and feel that all terrestrial objects are alike, and that Pluto, Ceres and Calyspo as cool as Mercury (or perhaps cooler), and they could have been born on such an object if we were in another star system.
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