Neighboring Region of Other Objects.": What Is A Dwarf Planet?
Neighboring Region of Other Objects.": What Is A Dwarf Planet?
Neighboring Region of Other Objects.": What Is A Dwarf Planet?
In August 2006 the International Astronomical Union (IAU) downgraded the status of Pluto
to that of "dwarf planet." This means that from now on only the rocky worlds of the inner
Solar System and the gas giants of the outer system will be designated as planets. The
“inner Solar System” is the region of space that is smaller than the radius of Jupiter’s orbit
around the sun. It contains the asteroid belt as well as the terrestrial planets, Mercury,
Venus, Earth, and Mars. The “gas giants” of course are Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune, and
Uranus. So now we have eight planets instead of the nine we used to have.
A “dwarf planet,” as defined by the IAU, is a celestial body in direct orbit of the Sun that is
massive enough that its shape is controlled by gravitational forces rather than mechanical
forces (and is thus ellipsoid in shape), but has not cleared its neighboring region of other
objects.
So, the three criteria of the IAU for a full-sized planet are:
Pluto meets only two of these criteria, losing out on the third. In all the billions of years it
has lived there, it has not managed to clear its neighborhood. You may wonder what that
means, “not clearing its neighboring region of other objects?” Sounds like a minesweeper in
space! This means that the planet has become gravitationally dominant -- there are no
other bodies of comparable size other than its own satellites or those otherwise under its
gravitational influence, in its vicinity in space.
So any large body that does not meet these criteria is now classed as a “dwarf planet,” and
that includes Pluto, which shares its orbital neighborhood with Kuiper belt objects such as
the plutinos.
History of Pluto
The object formerly known as the planet Pluto was discovered on February 18, 1930 at the
Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, by astronomer Clyde W. Tombaugh, with
contributions from William H. Pickering. This period in astronomy was one of intense planet
hunting, and Pickering was a prolific planet predictor.
In 1906, Percival Lowell, a wealthy Bostonian who had founded the Lowell Observatory in
Flagstaff, Arizona in 1894, started an extensive project in search of a possible ninth planet,
which he termed "Planet X." By 1909, Lowell and Pickering had suggested several possible
celestial coordinates for such a planet. Lowell and his observatory conducted the search
until his death in 1916, to no avail. Unknown to Lowell, on March 19, 1915, his observatory
had captured two faint images of Pluto, but they were not recognized for what they were.
Lowell was not the first to unknowingly photograph Pluto. There are sixteen known pre-
discoveries, with the oldest being made by the Yerkes Observatory on August 20, 1909.
The search for Planet X did not resume until 1929, when the job was handed to Clyde
Tombaugh, a 23-year-old Kansan who had just arrived at the Lowell
Observatory. Tombaugh's task was to systematically image the night sky in pairs of
photographs taken two weeks apart, then examine each pair and determine whether any
objects had shifted position. Using a machine called a blink comparator, he rapidly shifted
back and forth between views of each of the plates to create the illusion of movement of
any objects that had changed position or appearance between photographs. On February
18, 1930, after nearly a year of searching, Tombaugh discovered a possible moving object
on photographic plates taken on January 23 and January 29 of that year. After the
observatory obtained further confirmatory photographs, news of the discovery was
telegraphed to the Harvard College Observatory on March 13, 1930.
The discovery made headlines across the globe. The Lowell Observatory, which had the
right to name the new object, received over 1,000 suggestions from all over the world; the
name Pluto was proposed by Venetia Burney, an eleven-year-old schoolgirl in Oxford,
England. Venetia was interested in classical mythology as well as astronomy, and
considered the name for the god of the underworld appropriate for such a presumably dark
and cold world. She suggested it in a conversation with her grandfather Falconer Madan, a
former librarian at the University of Oxford's Bodleian Library. Madan passed the name to
Professor Herbert Hall Turner, who then cabled it to colleagues in the United States. Pluto
officially became Pluto on March 24, 1930. The name was announced on May 1, 1930, and
Venetia received five pounds (£5) as a reward.