Author Topic: Scientist leads effort to restore Pluto’s planetary stature  (Read 401 times)

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Scientist leads effort to restore Pluto’s planetary stature
Some leading planetary scientists have launched what might be the best shot in years at returning Pluto, now known as a “dwarf planet,” to what they consider its rightful place as a planet.
The Baltimore Sun (TNS)
By Tim Prudente  Originally published March 17, 2017 at 7:31 pm  |  Updated March 17, 2017 at 8:34 pm



Kirby Runyon is a Johns Hopkins University scientist behind a renewed effort to restore Pluto’s lost title. (Kim Hairston/TNS)



BALTIMORE — Ejected a decade ago from its place among the planets, the distant, icy world of Pluto still has its admirers.

The runt of the litter and ninth in line from the sun, Pluto was — for 75 years after its discovery — considered a peer of hefty Jupiter, Saturn and Uranus. And then one day it wasn’t.

“People like to root for the underdog,” said Kirby Runyon, a Johns Hopkins University scientist behind a renewed effort to restore Pluto’s lost title.

Runyon and some leading planetary scientists have launched what might be the best shot in years at returning the icy rock now known as a “dwarf planet” to what they consider its rightful orbital place. Pluto wouldn’t be the only one up for a promotion.

Its advocates’ generous definition of a planet would include Earth’s moon and crowd the cosmic neighborhood with 110 planets. The matter will be considered next week at the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference in Texas.

Runyon, 31, a doctoral candidate in planetary geology, recently waded into a long-simmering debate with the biggest names in astronomy.

“This is really just a Pluto-nostalgia thing dressed up like science,” said renowned planet hunter Mike Brown, an astronomer at the California Institute of Technology, who literally wrote the book on Pluto’s ouster, called: “How I Killed Pluto and Why It Had It Coming.”

“The Pluto-huggers think this is their chance,” Brown said.

Pluto’s popularity surged after a NASA flyby in summer 2015 revealed ice mountains, hazy clouds, canyons and cliffs. Images even revealed evidence of volcanoes. Admirers were invited to suggest mythology-themed names for these Earthlike features.

“Dear Pluto, lookin’ good. But you’re still a dwarf planet — get over it. Love, Neil deGrasse Tyson,” the celebrity astrophysicist and director of Hayden Planetarium in New York City, wrote on Twitter at the time.

Tyson and Brown gravitate toward the 237 astronomers who convened in Prague in August 2006 and voted Pluto out of the planet club. The controversial vote by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) — 157 members were opposed — rewrote the universal definition of a planet. Overnight, Pluto was relegated to dwarf planet status.

The IAU’s new criteria required that a full planet must “clear the neighborhood around its orbit,” meaning it must gravitationally dominate its surroundings and slingshot away debris.

“This was a Hail Mary attempt on the part of the IAU to declassify Pluto,” Runyon said. “No planet has totally cleared its orbit.”

Even mighty Jupiter has a cloud of asteroids. The strength of a planet’s slingshot forces decrease as it gets farther from the sun. Earth wouldn’t clear the debris way out in Pluto’s neighborhood, Runyon wrote.

So he co-authored and proposed a new definition with scientist Alan Stern, the principal investigator for NASA’s Pluto flyby.



Haze around Pluto appears blue in this image captured by New Horizons and processed to replicate the color a human eye would see. (NASA/JHUAPL/SwRI) (NASA/TNS)


“Among planetary scientists, almost no one considers it anything but laughable,” Stern said. “The astronomers went into an area they don’t own or know very much about, and they made a mess of it.”

Here lies the rift over the Pluto identity: on one side, astronomers, and on the other, planetary scientists.

“If you’re off in the woods and need emergency brain surgery, but the only doctor around is a foot doctor, you better say your prayers,” Stern said. “This is what happened: The podiatrists got hold of the brain surgery of planetary science.”

Brown, the Pluto killer, discovered in 2005 another shape in that far-flung neighborhood, and it was the densest one yet. His discovery of Eris, a little smaller but denser than Pluto, partly prompted the IAU to reconsider what makes a planet, well, a planet and rewrite the definition.

“The only reason Pluto was ever considered a planet was because people were grossly mistaken with how big it was,” Brown said.

The New York Times reported the discovery in 1930 with an article suggesting Pluto could be bigger than Jupiter; it wasn’t. In the following decades, the perceived size of Pluto would shrink and shrink.

Now Pluto is understood to be roughly the size of North America. One could line 59 Plutos across Jupiter’s equator. By volume, more than 200,000 Plutos could fit inside Jupiter. Pluto’s closest neighbor is Neptune.

“If Neptune were a Chevy Impala parked at the curb, ask yourself what car would Pluto be? … It would be a matchbox car,” Tyson said in an interview with TV host and comedian Stephen Colbert. During his appearance, Tyson wore a planetary necktie that omitted Pluto.

“If it’s not on a casual accessory owned by Neil deGrasse Tyson; it’s not worth knowing,” Colbert said. “Forget it, forget it, who cares?”

The reworked IAU definition maintains old requirements that planets must orbit the sun and have enough mass and gravity to wrap themselves into a ball.

“If you look at the solar system with fresh eyes,” Brown said, “you realize there are eight dominant bodies and everything else is being pushed around by these eight bodies.”

Runyon, however, proposed a definition that dramatically eases the standards: “Round objects in space that are smaller than stars,” he wrote.

There’s an exact science packed in that simplicity. Any round planet must possess enough mass and gravity to pull itself into a sphere. Tiny Pluto meets this criteria, so does Jupiter.

“Nobody is going to say a hummingbird femur isn’t a femur just because it’s little,” Runyon said.


http://www.seattletimes.com/nation-world/scientist-leads-effort-to-restore-plutos-planetary-stature/

 

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