The celestial body formerly known as a planet Pluto gets an upgrade.
Pluto is finally getting its day in the sun, after being stripped of planetary status by astronomers two years ago.
From now on all similar distant bodies in the solar system will be called “plutoids.” That’s the decision by the International Astronomical Union, which met last week in Oslo, Norway, and announced the decision Wednesday.
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The same group raised a cosmic fuss when it demoted the once-ninth planet to “dwarf” status in 2006. The new policy allows Pluto to be the standard for a whole new category of dwarf planets.
Pluto is one of only two plutoids, the other being Eris. Both are objects that circle the sun and are too small to be considered planets, but big enough to have a level of gravity that keeps them in a near spherical shape. Plutoids also must be farther from the sun than Neptune.
It was the 2003 discovery of Eris — a body bigger and farther from the sun than Pluto — that eventually led to Pluto’s demotion. But the astronomers expect more plutoids to be discovered in the future.
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It was not enough to satisfy leading Pluto-as-a-planet advocate Alan Stern, a former NASA space sciences chief and principal investigator on a mission to Pluto. Stern said a rival group could be formed to the IAU, which he said was too secretive in its decision-making.
“It’s just some people in a smoke-filled room who dreamed it up,” Stern said. “Plutoids or hemorrhoids, whatever they call it. This is irrelevant.”
Another Pluto supporter was at least partially pleased.
“It’s going in the right direction,” laughed Ralph McNutt, a planetary scientist at Johns Hopkins University. “I’d still rather have it just be known as a planet.”
“I grew up with nine planets, I’m sorry,” McNutt said.
SciGuy has more. I guess this is okay, but I’m with McNutt. Life was simpler when we had nine planets. And if we must call Pluto something else, I still like my idea better.
McNutt won’t admit it, but he just tired of the ghost of Clyde Tombaugh waking him up with demands to “Give me back my planet status!”
Those astronomoids don’t have enough to do.