It good to see college students getting worked up about something
besides which bar to get pie-faced at over the week end. [snicker]

Pluto demotion draws protest
http://www.cnn.com/2006/TECH/space/09/02/pluto.protest.ap/index.html?section=cnn_topstories

LAS CRUCES, New Mexico (AP) -- Size doesn't matter.

That was the message as friends and colleagues of the late Clyde
Tombaugh, the astronomer who discovered Pluto, gathered on the New
Mexico State University campus to protest the International Astronomical
Union's recent decision to strip Pluto of its status as a planet.

About 50 students and staff members turned out Friday for the
good-natured challenge. Some were wearing T-shirts and carrying signs
that read "Protest for Pluto" and "Size Doesn't Matter."

Tombaugh's widow, Patricia, and their son, Al Tombaugh, also participated.

NMSU astronomer Bernie McNamara told the crowd that textbooks shouldn't
be rewritten.

"Why not? Because the debate is not over," McNamara said.

The IAU determined last week that a planet must orbit the sun and be
large enough to assume a nearly round shape as well as "clear the
neighborhood around its orbit." Pluto's oblong orbit overlaps Neptune's,
which led the IAU to downsize the solar system to eight planets from the
traditional nine. (Full story)

McNamara argued that only about 400 of the union's thousands of members
were present when the August 24 vote was taken.

"This was not a statement by the astronomical community at large," he
said, adding that a petition opposing the IAU definition of a planet is
circulating among the world's planetary scientists and astronomers.

Tombaugh was 24 when he discovered Pluto while working at Lowell
Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, in 1930. He came to NMSU in 1955 and
founded the school's research astronomy department.

His legacy is visible across the city, where an observatory, a campus
street and an elementary school bear his name.

Some say Tombaugh's discovery was significant because it took 60 years
for stronger telescopes to locate another object with an unusual orbit
like Pluto's, and 73 years before scientists discovered a bigger object
in the area.

"Clyde Tombaugh was an American hero," said Herb Beebe, a longtime
colleague. "For that reason alone, Pluto's status as a full-fledged
planet should be kept."

Leigh
http://leighm.net/

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