http://www.csmonitor.com/2002/1008/p01s01-ussc.html

Pluto risks being demoted in status

Ever since its discovery, Pluto has never really fitted in.
After the pale and glowing giant Neptune, it is little more than a cosmic
dust mite, swept through the farthest reaches of the solar system on a plane
wildly tilted relative to the rest of the planets. It is smaller than
Neptune's largest moon, and the arc of its orbit is so oval that it
occasionally crosses its massive blue neighbor's path.

For years, it has been seen as our solar system's oddest planet. Monday,
however, scientists released perhaps the most convincing evidence yet that
Pluto, in fact, is not a planet at all.

For the first time, astronomers have peered into a belt of rocks beyond
Pluto - unknown until 10 years ago - and found a world that rivals Pluto in
size.

The scientists posit that larger rocks must be out there, perhaps even
larger than Pluto, meaning Pluto is more likely the king of this distant
realm of space detritus than the tiniest of the nine planets.

When discovered in 1930, "Pluto at that point was the only thing [that far]
out there, so there was nothing else to call it but a planet," says Mike
Brown, an astronomer at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena.
"Now it just doesn't fit."

In one sense, the question of Pluto's planetary status is arcane, the
province of pocket-protected scientists and sun-deprived pen pushers
determined to decide some official designation for a ball of dust and ice 3
billion miles away.

Yet it is also unquestionably something more. From science fair dioramas to
government funding, planets hold a special place in the public imagination,
and how Pluto is eventually seen - by kids and Congress alike - could shape
what future generations learn about this mysterious outpost on the edge of
the solar system.

The debate has split the astronomical community for decades. Even before the
distant band of rocks known as the Kuiper Belt was found, Pluto's unusual
behavior made it suspicious.

Elsewhere, the solar system fit into neat families: the rocky inner planets,
the asteroid belt, the huge and gaseous outer planets. Pluto, though, was
peculiar.

With the discovery of the Kuiper Belt - countless bits of rock and ice left
unused when the wheel of the solar system first formed - Pluto suddenly
seemed to have cousins.

Yet, until yesterday, it held to its planetary distinction because it was
far larger than anything located there.

The rub now is Quaoar (pronounced KWAH-oar), 1 billion miles beyond Pluto
and roughly half as large. Named after the creation force of the tribe that
originally inhabited the Los Angeles basin, Quaoar forecasts problems for
the erstwhile ninth planet, says discoverer Dr. Brown: "The case is going to
get a lot harder to defend the day somebody finds something larger than
Pluto."

To some, the problem is not with Pluto, but the definition of "planet." In
short, there is none.

To the Greeks, who coined the term, it meant "wanderer," describing the way
that the planets moved across the night sky differently from the stars
behind them.

Today, with our more nuanced understanding of the universe, the word no
longer has much scientific meaning.

New York's Hayden Planetarium caused a commotion two years ago by supposedly
"demoting" Pluto, lumping it with the Kuiper Belt objects in its huge mobile
of the solar system.

In reality, however, the planetarium was making a much broader statement,
says Neil Degrasse Tyson, an astrophysicist there. The textbooks of the
future should focus more on families of like objects than "planets."

The discovery of Quaoar strengthens this idea: "Everyone needs to rethink
the structure of our solar system," he says. "We've just stopped counting
planets."

Still, many are loath to part with the planet Pluto. They note that Pluto,
in fact, is distinct from many Kuiper Belt objects. It has a thin
atmosphere, for one. It reflects a great deal of light, while most Kuiper
Belt objects are very dark. And unlike all but a handful of known Kuiper
Belt objects, it has a moon.

"Maybe Pluto, then, should be representative of a new class of planets,"
says Mark Sykes, an astronomer at the University of Arizona in Tucson.

"It's the first example, and we are just beginning to find this category."



xponent

Planet? Maru

rob


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