Pluto fizzled at IAU's Rio meeting
Philosophy

Pluto fizzled at IAU's Rio meeting



The IAU's Rio meeting never discussed the sensitive issue of Pluto's status.

"Pluto still not a planet after astronomy meeting"

by

Dan Vergano

August 13th, 2009

USA Today

An international astronomy meeting ended Thursday in Rio de Janeiro, and Pluto is still not a planet. The closing ceremonies of the 2009 International Astronomical Union (IAU) concluded with nary a peep about the planetary brouhaha that saw walk-outs and table-banging three years ago at the venerable astronomer's assembly, in Prague.

"None of that stuff at all came up," said IAU spokesman Lars Lindberg Christensen, speaking from a taxi speeding away from the meeting for one of Rio's restaurants. "I believe people still disagree, but the focus was really on science at the meeting."

In 2006, the IAU meeting assembly demoted Pluto into a "dwarf planet" (sometimes called a "plutoid") because it has failed to have "cleared the neighborhood around its orbit," in the words of the assembly's resolution. Pluto only weighs 0.07 as much as the rest of the objects in its orbit, which includes "Kuiper Belt" comets and Neptune, an ice giant planet. Earth, in contrast, weighs 1.7 million times more than the remaining objects in its orbit, asteroids and the moon, making it a planet, according to the just-released Pluto Confidential: An Insider Account of the Ongoing Battles Over the Status of Pluto, by astronomers Steve Maran and Laurence Marschall.

The two authors split on whether Pluto is a planet, with Maran arguing for the demoted world. "Pluto is still the people's planet and, if anything, more popular as an underdog than ever before," Maran writes.

"I believe that the IAU had no interest in revisiting the question of Pluto this year. The vocal disagreements that occurred at the General Assembly in 2006 embarrassed the organization. The decision made then, whether we like it or not, solved the IAU’s practical problem, by specifying how objects in the Kuiper Belt will be classified, for purpose of assigning names to them, an IAU responsibility. They name planets according to one practice and dwarf planets and asteroids in another way," Maran says. "Meanwhile, astronomers are generally agreed that the 2006 IAU planet definition is not helpful in our scientific work, and will fall into disuse. That may not bring Pluto back, however."

Indeed, the IAU meeting ended with a resolution to develop more astronomical resources for poorer nations, instead of a fight over Pluto. But the battle isn't likely over. "I expect people will still argue, and that's probably a good thing for science," Lindberg says.




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