New planets discovered orbiting our Sun

New planets discovered orbiting our Sun

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Derek Smith

Original Poster:

45,613 posts

248 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
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This is seven in the eye for the IAU.

http://www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/news/moon-rises-... (Apologies for quoting a source that does not capitalise Moon.)

It would appear that there are many more planets orbiting the Sun that originally thought; seven in fact. This argument is over the Moon, Europa, Ganymede, Titan and Enceladus. Not to forget that big one sometimes orbiting in the Ort Cloud.

It will come as no surprise to hear that Alan Stern, of New Horizons fame, is the leader in the campaign to get these moons labelled as planets.

I remember listening to, I think, Carl Sagan when he said the proper way to think of the Earth and Moon is as a dual planet system. His point was more gravitational than size I think but I agreed with him. I hope he appreciated my support.


Blaster72

10,827 posts

197 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
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Nice click bait title to this thread.

Re-classifying the Moon as a planet isn't by any means the same as "discovering" new planets orbiting our Sun.


Eric Mc

121,958 posts

265 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
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Also, one of the key definitions of a planet is that it has to orbit the sun directly and not orbit another primary planetary body.

On that basis, large moons such as our Moon and Ganymede, Titan etc can't be classed as planets because they orbit a planet rather than the sun directly.

At the end of the day, what we chose to label these objects as is almost irrelevant. We came up with definitions and categories for our own labelling purposes and convenience. The important thing is what we can learn about these worlds - not what box we chose to put them in.

Derek Smith

Original Poster:

45,613 posts

248 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
quotequote all
Blaster72 said:
Nice click bait title to this thread.

Re-classifying the Moon as a planet isn't by any means the same as "discovering" new planets orbiting our Sun.
It wasn't expected to deceive anyone, merely interest.


Derek Smith

Original Poster:

45,613 posts

248 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
quotequote all
Eric Mc said:
Also, one of the key definitions of a planet is that it has to orbit the sun directly and not orbit another primary planetary body.

On that basis, large moons such as our Moon and Ganymede, Titan etc can't be classed as planets because they orbit a planet rather than the sun directly.

At the end of the day, what we chose to label these objects as is almost irrelevant. We came up with definitions and categories for our own labelling purposes and convenience. The important thing is what we can learn about these worlds - not what box we chose to put them in.
Stern and his supporters are after changing the definition. The Moon does not orbit the Earth of course, and that was the point of Sagan's suggestion. More to the point, why should orbiting a planet stop a large body being classified as a planet? It still orbits the Sun just not steadily. Titan's bigger than Mercury and not far short of Mars.

Seems unfair. Whatever the definition it will be seen as arbitrary by some.


Einion Yrth

19,575 posts

244 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
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Eric Mc said:
On that basis, large moons such as our Moon and Ganymede, Titan etc can't be classed as planets because they orbit a planet rather than the sun directly.
Since the Earth and Luna orbit their common barycentre, which lies within Earth, but some way from the centre; that's debatable.

Some Gump

12,687 posts

186 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
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Nah, not buying it. Titan can be as big as it wants, its tiny next to planet it orbits so under the definition as always had been, it's Jupiter's moon, they are not binary planets.

To me it's as daft as reclassifying a great Dane as a small horse because it's bigger than a wee pony. You can't ignore loads of things and just define by size.

Mind, you might want to remember I'm a Luddite, who still refuses to think of the planet Pluto as anything less than a small planet.

Einion Yrth

19,575 posts

244 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
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Some Gump said:
refuses to think of the planet Pluto as anything less than a small planet.
It was reclassified as a "dwarf planet", "dwarf" and "small" are pretty close synonyms, no?

CrutyRammers

13,735 posts

198 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
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Eric Mc said:
Also, one of the key definitions of a planet is that it has to orbit the sun directly and not orbit another primary planetary body.

On that basis, large moons such as our Moon and Ganymede, Titan etc can't be classed as planets because they orbit a planet rather than the sun directly.

At the end of the day, what we chose to label these objects as is almost irrelevant. We came up with definitions and categories for our own labelling purposes and convenience. The important thing is what we can learn about these worlds - not what box we chose to put them in.
Indeed. We call them moons so that everyone knows that they orbit the main planet. Calling them planets as well will just mean that we have to come up with another name for "small planet going round a larger one"

Derek Smith

Original Poster:

45,613 posts

248 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
quotequote all
CrutyRammers said:
Indeed. We call them moons so that everyone knows that they orbit the main planet. Calling them planets as well will just mean that we have to come up with another name for "small planet going round a larger one"
Could it not be that a planet can also be a moon?

Some Gump said:
Nah, not buying it. Titan can be as big as it wants, its tiny next to planet it orbits so under the definition as always had been, it's Jupiter's moon, they are not binary planets.

To me it's as daft as reclassifying a great Dane as a small horse because it's bigger than a wee pony. You can't ignore loads of things and just define by size.

Mind, you might want to remember I'm a Luddite, who still refuses to think of the planet Pluto as anything less than a small planet.
Did Titan always orbit Saturn or was it, perhaps, a free spirit and then captured? Perhaps a captured moon planet?

A Great Dane is normally bigger than some horses, also called ponies, but the difference between them is that they are different animals. Most moons are made of the same stuff as planets.

The Moon and Earth orbit their common centre of gravity so I can see that as a reason to have us as a dual planet system.

Alan Stern is the bloke pushing this. He was, if memory serves, a leader in the campaign to stop Pluto being ignored.


Einion Yrth

19,575 posts

244 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
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Derek Smith said:
Alan Stern is the bloke pushing this. He was, if memory serves, a leader in the campaign to stop Pluto being ignored.
As the P.I. for the New Horizons mission he had perhaps just a smidgeonette of a vested interest?

grumbledoak

31,532 posts

233 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
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NASA should be striving for some bigger achievements in the future, not "bigging up" it's past.

Some Gump

12,687 posts

186 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
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^ I wasn't about back when titan started orbiting, so I don't know. However, once it reached a stable orbit, it became a moon. To pretty much anyone, that's what a moon is - a small thing going round a big thing. If earth magically teleported to be near jupiter, and it started going round and rond for a laugh, our planet would be a moon of jupiter.

You can get all Sheldon and say well the Moon doesn't orbit the centre of Earth, and the pair orbit offset - but IMO that's just more visible because we have 1 moon not 3 or 4. I'm quite confident that the Sun itself has motion caused by jupiter, it's just that it's tiny due to the relative masses and distances involved. IMO this doesn't approach what I'd think of as a binary pair - when 2 far more similar masses are involved then to me that's fine.

I'm sure the leaders of the scientific field will come to the right conclusion - but from a popular science point of view, no-one is going to win an argument that the moon isn't a moon, unless they're David Niven.

CrutyRammers

13,735 posts

198 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
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Derek Smith said:
CrutyRammers said:
Indeed. We call them moons so that everyone knows that they orbit the main planet. Calling them planets as well will just mean that we have to come up with another name for "small planet going round a larger one"
Could it not be that a planet can also be a moon?
Does that help? Anything at all?
Ultimately we need names for things which people understand. The above example re: the sun and planets also orbiting a common centre is quite correct. Planets are from the same stuff as stars, they just didn't get big enough. So lets just call everything a "star" and have done.

perdu

4,884 posts

199 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
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Well I'm not having that

If I have to live on a star my coffee will never cool down enough to drink frown







Dead horse flogging time Derek

Eric Mc

121,958 posts

265 months

Monday 20th February 2017
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grumbledoak said:
NASA should be striving for some bigger achievements in the future, not "bigging up" it's past.
It is - but its hamstrung by restricted budgets.

Having said that NASA does lots of stuff all the time - it's just that the mainstream media doesn't pay much attention to its programmes. If you look them up, you might be amazed at the hundreds of different projects they are actively involved in all the time.

Derek Smith

Original Poster:

45,613 posts

248 months

Monday 20th February 2017
quotequote all
perdu said:
Dead horse flogging time Derek
I'm not suggesting it is a good idea, and I haven't said whether I'm for or against it. However, given that this has been put forward by a group of NASA scientists and the bloke in charge of the New Horizons mission is leading it, it shouldn't be ignored. They might know what they are talking about.

Isn't science all about change? Isn't it the signature trait of scientists a willingness to consider all options, including those off the wall? Stern stated that: “It’s [the definition of planet] an awful definition; it’s sloppy science and it would never pass peer review.”

Is, for instance, Charon still a satellite? That, surely, is a dual dwarf planetary system.

We should change definitions as they become difficult to justify. After all, what would QI do if we didn't?


Hugo a Gogo

23,378 posts

233 months

Monday 20th February 2017
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Some Gump said:
I'm quite confident that the Sun itself has motion caused by jupiter, it's just that it's tiny due to the relative masses and distances involved. IMO this doesn't approach what I'd think of as a binary pair - when 2 far more similar masses are involved then to me that's fine.
actually the barycenter of the Jupiter/Sun orbit lies outside the sun's surface, so an even better example than Earth/Moon

nice animation in this link
http://www.iflscience.com/space/forget-wha-you-hea...

Eric Mc

121,958 posts

265 months

Monday 20th February 2017
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Derek Smith said:
Is, for instance, Charon still a satellite? That, surely, is a dual dwarf planetary system.
Pluto has FIVE moons (or is a six planet system as Derek would have us believe smile) - Charon, Nix, Styx, Kerberus and Hydra (not soft rock band by the way).


Pluto would be a silly situations with Derek's suggested nomenclature with a dwarf planet (Pluto) having five actual "planets" orbiting it. It would all get very confusing.

I think the current nomenclature is pretty much the best they've come up with so far. Things need to change when new discoveries are made.
The reason Pluto's definition was changed from "Planet" to "Dwarf Planet" was the discovery of literally hundreds if not thousands of Pluto like objects orbiting further out - what are referred to as Kuiper Belt Objects. It seems Pluto is really a member of that group rather than a bona fide planet in the normal sense.

At the end of the day, what we chose to call things is only for our own convenience. The objects just "are" - whatever we name them as.

As I said earlier, getting hung up on what category we want to place planetary bodies in is really a waste of time. It's far better to devote time and effort to actually studying them and trying to understand WHAT they actually are and how geological processes work on them.

CrutyRammers

13,735 posts

198 months

Monday 20th February 2017
quotequote all
Eric Mc said:
At the end of the day, what we chose to call things is only for our own convenience. The objects just "are" - whatever we name them as.

As I said earlier, getting hung up on what category we want to place planetary bodies in is really a waste of time. It's far better to devote time and effort to actually studying them and trying to understand WHAT they actually are and how geological processes work on them.
Amen smile