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Saturday, August 23, 2008

Is Pluto a Planet or Not?

Pluto was first referred to as Planet X by the astronomer Percival Lowell. He reasoned it existed
because something was causing slight variations in the orbits of the planets Neptune and Uranus.
He believed only another body large enough to exert a strong enough gravitational field could affect Neptune and Uranus' orbits.

Unfortunatley Percival Lowell died in 1916 without having proven the existence of Planet X. In 1930,
astronomer Clyde Tombaugh discovered "Planet X" 3.7 billion miles from our sun. He did this by
using an astronomical telescope to expose a series of photographic plates. The Plates clearly showed
a small object had moved against the background of distant stars.

This discovery turned out to be the result of a happy accident. The calculations that predicted
the existence of a planet beyond the orbit of Neptune later proved to be in error. The Voyager
2 spacecraft was able to measure the mass of the planet Neptune more accurately. When this new data
is used the variations in the orbits of Uranus and Neptune disappear.

None the less the new planet was dubbed Pluto. Several names were suggested including Zeus,
Cronus and Minerva. But in 1930 Pluto was officially labeled the ninth planet by the
International Astronomical Union and named for the Roman god of the underworld.

The axis of Pluto's poles do not point "up" and "down" out of the plane of the solar system
like planet Earth's. Instead the point more inward toward the Sun. Pluto is usually farther
from the Sun than any of the other planets. But due to it's eccentric orbit, it is closer to the
Sun than Neptune for 20 years out of its 249 year orbit. Pluto crossed inside Neptune's orbit
on January 21, 1979 and made its closest approach to the Sun on September 5, 1989. It remained
within the orbit of Neptune until February 11, 1999. This will not happen again until September 2226.
Pluto's odd orbit has lead some to say it is a "trans-Neptunian interloper". Which means it is
more like a Kuiper belt comet than a planet.

The composition of Pluto is unknown, but its density (about 2 gm/cm3) probably indicates it is a mixture
of and 30% water ice and 70% rock. The bright areas of the surface appear to be covered with ices of
nitrogen and smaller amounts of methane, ethane and carbon monoxide. The composition of the darker areas
on Pluto's surface is not known.

Pluto does have an atmosphere which probably consists mostly of nitrogen with some carbon monoxide
and methane. It is extremely thin with a surface pressure of only a few microbars. Pluto's atmosphere probably exist as
a gas only when Pluto is near the Sun. For the rest of Pluto's long orbit the atmospheric gases are frozen solid. Near the
Sun it is possible that some of the atmospheric gases escape into space. NASA mission planners hope to arrive at Pluto
while the atmosphere is still in gas form.

In 1978 it was discovered that pluto has a moon. Officially named Charon after the mythological
figure who ferried the dead across the River Acheron into the underworld. Charon was discovered
by Jim Christy and may have been named in honor of his wife Charlene. Before the discovery of
Charon it was believed Pluto was much larger since the images of the two were blurred together.

Pluto and Charon are unique in that they rotate synchronously with each other. Which means they
both keep the same face toward one another. It has been suggested that Charon was formed by a
giant impact against Pluto similar to the one that formed Earth's Moon. In 2005 a team using
the Hubble Space Telescope discovered two tiny moons orbiting around both Pluto and Charon.
They have been named Nix and Hydra. They are very small with diameters between 40 and 60 kilometers.

Recently there has been considerable debate about the classification of Pluto. It was classified as the a
planet just after its discovery and remained so for 75 years. But on 2006 Aug 24 the International
Astronomical Union decided to change the definition of a "planet". The new definition does not include Pluto.
Instead Pluto is now classified as a "dwarf planet". Personally I don't agree with taking away Pluto's
status as a planet. Maybe I am being superstitious, but as any sailor worth his salt will tell you it is
generally considered bad luck to change the name of a ship once she was been christened.

As of the writing of this article Pluto has not yet been explored by a space probe. On January 19, 2006
NASA launched New Horizons which will be the first spacecraft to visit Pluto in July 2015. New Horizons
is equipped with remote sensing devices that include imaging instruments, a radio science tool, a
spectroscopic sensor and other experiments. The tiny moons Nix and Hydra may present a certain
danger as their presence indicates the possibility of ring system similar to the one around Saturn,
though much smaller. Any ring system poses the threat of micrometeorite damage to the New Horizons
spacecraft as it flys past.

I hope very much that all goes well and the New Horizons space probe sends back a wealth of information about
"Planet X" or Pluto as it is known. Perhaps then we will be able to settle the debate as to whether
Pluto is really a planet or not.

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