But I learned Pluto is a planet back in school. So ..
And school children from ~1800 to ~1850 learned that Pallas, Juno, Ceres, and Vesta were planets.
But I learned Pluto is a planet back in school. So ..
So Ceres is a planet too?
Pluto is far from a minor character, having had shorts built exclusively around his activities...
https://phys.org/news/2018-09-pluto-reclassified-planet.html
Pluto pulled itself into a round shape, is geologically the second most complex solar orbiting object, and was most disgracefully red carded.
Thank you for this revising revisionism.
Wait a second. That's not the definition of clearing one's neighborhood, is it?
'Disgracefully red carded'
People are way too much emotionally attached to a situation like this with Pluto.
Face it.
Whatever the criterium is for 'planet' status. The universe is big enough that there will be edge cases, which can mean they will fall on the planet side or the minor planet side of the equation, depending on how you look at it.
Clearing one's neighborhood shouldn't be part of the definition of planet.
Maybe, I don't disagree with you. But that's irrelevant: it IS part of the definition, and Pluto doesn't qualify.
In any case, Pluto's orbit suggests a different origin than the eight canonical planets.
And four is cleaner than eight, so why not say that only Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune are true planets? There's a much cleaner dividing line between Neptune and Earth than there is between Mercury and Pluto.
Choosing your criteria just to reduce the number of planets is cowardly. Be brave. Choose a solar system with 20+ planets.
It won't be the case with the earth forever either. The moon's orbital radius will eventually increase by roughly 40%, which should put the barycenter a bit outside the earth's surface. It would be strange for this gradual and smooth process to suddenly demote the earth from planet status.
Give it some credit here.
It's completely relevant, because the definition can be changed.
So what?
No, it's irrelevant to what the definition IS.
If someone can make a good argument for further change they're welcome to do so.
"Poor Pluto" doesn't qualify.
So it's one more reason for a different classification.
All classifications are arbitrary. We added one because the number of 'planets' was getting out of hand. How many planets are there in the solar system, you think, if we keep the old system ? 60,000?
But we aren't only talking about what the definition is.
Nor is there any requirement that we all adopt the same definition as the IAU, which has no authority to impose its definition on anyone.
Many have.
Of course. I don't think anyone is saying that in seriousness, and I certainly don't take it seriously.
It's not a good reason to classify it as not a planet.
There are not 60,000 bodies large enough to gravitationally pull themselves into spheroids.
Let's heard yours. I have my own, by the way. But it still wouldn't include Pluto.
Why not?
You don't know that. We found quite a few of them in just a few years and in a very small portion of the solar system. There indeed may be thousands.
Because the definition shouldn't be history-dependent.
But it has to be as we gain further knowledge or we are forever bound to definitions that don't make sense anymore.
I was referring to the history of the object under consideration, not the history of the word. So the present properties of an object should determine whether or not it's a planet, not what the object's past history is.
Exactly. Things should be as they were, when I was young. Especially my hair.