Maybe Charon should've been called Persephone...
Except that the discoverer had a daughter named "Sharon," it might have been.
Maybe Charon should've been called Persephone...
Except that the discoverer had a daughter named "Sharon," it might have been.
Absolutely, next you might have to accept things like humans being related to animals and other crap like that.Damn right they should! All these morons pressuring them to remove it's planetary status should be ignored.
I think any definition of "planet" will have to be arbitrary in some way: arbitrary restrictions on size, shape, distance from the sun, eccentricity of its orbit, etc. So I have a feeling the definition we eventually come up with will place the arbitrary dividing lines such that Pluto is a planet and the other similar Kuiper belt objects aren't.
It is part of a binarly planet
Why isn't the earth/moon system a binary planet?
Easy, if they where discovered before 1950 they get to be planets.
I welcome new objects being called planets. Shows we're progressing. NPR had a story on this morning that said that there might be as many as 44 new objects that could be classified as planets. That would be wonderfully cool.
Taking away Pluto's status as a planet is rather like revisionist history IMO. Plus, it'd be nice to finally have a formal definition of a word that has been in use for 2500 years.
How about the ones we find/found after 1950 orbiting other systems?
My understanding is that the barycentre of the earth-moon system is inside the earth.
Is that the standard basis for determining binarys for stars?
Why not? Why should binary planets have this funky defintion and requirement to meet but stars get a free passEr, probably not, because there's no other option for a configuration of stars.
I may not be fully understanding your question.
Only smaller bodies -- planets and such-like -- have been observed to arrange themselves in satellite-like configurations, where body A orbits body B, while the joint A-B system orbits body C as a unit. The likelihood of two stars forming closely enough that their barycentre was within one of the stars, while still remaining separate bodies, is close to zero; they would simply collapse into a single star instead.
Why not? Why should binary planets have this funky defintion and requirement to meet but stars get a free pass
At formation, what about now? I thought there had been some neutron stars and such observed in very close orbits.
In the past when the moon was closer would it have qualified as a binary planet then?
Because stars don't assemble themselves -- at least, not for very long -- into funky configurations.
Not that close. That close, they collapse. See this page from the APS for an illustration