The solar
system seems to be getting more crowded by the day as its once nine-world
population gives way to a realm of planets, dwarfs and the dim and distant
plutoids.
But in
reality, the solar system is still the same. It’s just the
names for the new stuff astronomers find that are changing.
The cosmic
can of worms opened in 2006 when after much debate the International
Astronomical Union (IAU) - an international society of astronomers - demoted
Pluto to dwarf planet status, 76 years after its discovery. The decision is
still widely contended among astronomers, and the IAU added more fuel to the
debate last month when it filed Pluto and similar objects under a new category:
“plutoid.”
Objects
such as Eris and the newly-named
Makemake, which like Pluto circle the sun out beyond the orbit of Neptune,
also fall among the plutoid and dwarf planet ranks.
While
astronomers continue to debate the definitions and differences of terms like
“planet,” “dwarf planet” and “plutoid,” the IAU has offered its take on the
newest rungs in the solar system’s ladder:
What is
a planet?
By the
IAU’s 2006 definition, a planet is a celestial body that orbits the sun, has
enough mass that its gravity gives it a nearly round shape and has cleared its
surrounding area of debris.
Pluto,
while round and orbiting the sun, is one of a swarm of so-called
trans-Neptunian objects, small icy bodies in the comet reservoir of the Kuiper
Belt that extends out from Neptune’s orbit, leading to its IAU demotion. But critics
have said that asteroids can be found accompanying established planets like
Earth, Mars and Jupiter, throwing a wrench in that requirement.
What is
a dwarf planet?
A dwarf
planet, meanwhile, is defined as an object that orbits the sun, has enough mass
and gravity to assume a nearly round shape. It need not have swept its local
region clean, which opened the dwarf planet gate not only for Pluto, Eris,
Makemake and others beyond Neptune, but also Ceres - the largest asteroid in
the solar system. Ceres circles the sun in the asteroid belt between Mars and
Jupiter.
Objects
smaller than a dwarf planet are called solar system bodies, according to the
IAU. Other astronomers refer to such things, right down to relatively small
asteroids, as minor planets.
What is
a plutoid?
Last month,
the IAU also reclassified Pluto, and any other dwarf planet or round object
beyond Neptune, as a so-called
plutoid.
Like dwarf
planets, plutoids must orbit the sun and be massive enough to maintain a nearly
round shape. But they also must be located beyond the orbit of Neptune, which
circles the sun every 165 years from a distance of about 30 astronomical units
(AU). One AU is the distance from the Earth to the sun, or about 93 million
miles (150 million km).
It should
be noted that according to the IAU, the small moons of dwarf planets or
plutoids cannot themselves be considered as dwarf planets or plutoids.
What’s
in a name?
The three
designations have taken center stage in recent years as astronomers spot new
objects and refine the orbits and attributes of other known, but distant, solar
system bodies. There are other, even odder designations – things like plutons,
plutinos, centaurs and EKOs – but when it comes to actually naming
something, the IAU wins out.
Take
Makemake, which earned its name this summer three years after its discovery in
2005 by astronomer Mike Brown of the California Institute of Technology in
Pasadena, Calif., whose team has discovered myriad similar, distant objects.
When
astronomers spot a previously unknown solar system body or dwarf planet
contender, it gains a provisional moniker (Makemake was
2005 FY9) and is then observed until its orbit can be better
determined. Once that happens, it is given a permanent designation by the IAU’s Minor Planet
Center (136472 for Makemake) and awaits the selection of an an official name.
The
discoverer of an object can then suggest a name to the IAU, which meets in a
committee to decide on its suitability. For Makemake, Brown chose the name of a
fertility god from Rapa Nui, or Easter Island.
“We take
naming objects in the solar system very carefully,” Brown wrote in a recent
blog post, adding that he seeks names from mythology that seem to have some
sort of resonance with the object to bear the moniker. “Each of these names
came after considerable thought and debate, and each of them fit some
characteristic of the body that made us feel that it was appropriate.”
With that
in mind, here’s a look at what astronomer’s know is way out there now, circling
the sun:
The
major planets
Since 2006,
there have been just eight major planets, by the IAU’s definition. Starting
closest to the Sun, they are: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn,
Uranus and Neptune.
With the
exception of Earth, the planets were named after major players in Greek or
Roman mythology, a tradition that began in antiquity and was continued with the
somewhat recent discoveries of Uranus (in 1781) and Neptune (in 1846).
The same
approach was applied to Pluto when astronomer Clyde Tombaugh spotted it in
1930, though the demoted world’s name was actually suggested by then
11-year-old Venetia Burney Phair of England. She named the world after the
Roman god of the underworld.
Dwarf
planets and plutoids
In addition
to Pluto, the dwarf planet population of the solar system currently includes
Ceres, Eris, Makemake and another world currently dubbed 2003 EL61.
- Named
after a Roman goddess of grain, Ceres was discovered in 1801 and was
initially considered a planet until astronomers began to spot other
asteroids circling the sun in nearby orbits. While a dwarf planet, the
round, potentially water-ice bearing space rock does not qualify as
a plutoid because it circles the sun well inside the orbit of Neptune.
- Unlike
Ceres, Eris (ee'-ris) does qualify as both dwarf planet and plutoid. It is
about 70 miles (112 km) wider than Pluto, orbits the sun from about 9
billion miles (14 billion km) away and is one of the brightest objects in
the Kuiper Belt.
Discovered by Brown and his team in 2005, Eris was initially nicknamed
“Xena” and its solitary moon “Gabrielle” after the lead characters of a
television show. It takes
its official name, Eris, from the Greek goddess of chaos and strife as
a fitting tribute to the debate it and other object sparked over the
definition of a planet. The object’s moon, Dysnomia, is named after the
daughter of Eris, who served as the spirit of lawlessness.
- Makemake
(pronounced MAH-keh MAH-keh) is the newest dwarf
planet and plutoid to gain a name. The tiny red-hued world is though to be
covered with a layer of frozen methane and is smaller and dimmer than
Pluto.
Earlier this month, the IAU officially announced that the object was named
Makemake after the Polynesian god of fertility and creator of humanity
among the people of Rapa Nui, also known as Easter Island, in the Pacific
Ocean. Brown learned of the name while researching various mythologies for
potential monikers and found it particularly striking. “Eris, Makemake, and 2003 EL61
were all discovered as my wife was 3-6 months pregnant with our daughter,”
he said in a statement.
Waiting
in the wings
The list
doesn’t stop there. There are still more objects waiting for wings for either
their own classification or official name:
- While it
doesn’t have an official name yet, 2003 EL61 is an object also discovered
by Brown’s team and an independent group led by Jose-Luis Ortiz of the
Sierra Nevada Observatory in Spain. It has its own moon, is about 32
percent as massive as Pluto and about 70 percent that of Pluto’s 1,413-mile (2,274-km) diameter. But it’s also
shaped like an ice-covered football, making it one weird, distant space
cookie.
- Then
there’s Sedna (sed’nah), an object about three-fourths the size of
Pluto that is so far out from the sun it takes about 10,500 years to make
a single orbit. Sedna is about 1,100 miles
(1,770 km) wide and circles the sun on an extremely eccentric orbit that
ranges between 8 billion miles (12.9 billion km) and 84 billion miles (135
billion km). Brown’s team led the discovery of that object in 2004
and named it after the Inuit goddess of the sea. Sedna does not qualify as
a plutoid because of what some astronomers see as a quirky threshold for
how much sunlight it reflects: Sedna is too dim.
- Quaoar (KWAH-o-ar), another find by Brown and co-discoverer
Chad Trujillo, is 780 miles (1,250 km) wide, half the size of Pluto and
takes 288 years to orbit the sun from about 4 billion miles (6.5 billion
km) away. It was named after the creation force of the Tongva tribe of the
Los Angeles basin.
- Brown’s
team also found Orcus (awr-kuhs), or 2004 DW, an object about 994 miles (1,600
km). It is nearly 47 AU from the Sun, was discovered
in 2004, and is so Pluto-like in its attributes that astronomers
named it after the Etruscan counterpart of the Roman underworld deity.
- And there’s still Varuna, or KBO 20000 Varuna, an icy
object 40 percent as large as Pluto and 560 miles (900 km) wide that was
first spotted in 2000 by astronomers using the Spacewatch telescope in
Arizona.
But
don’t get too comfortable with this list. There’s surely more to follow.
By
the IAU’s own admission, at least a few dozen more dwarf planets, if not
hundreds, remain to be found as they silently orbit the sun at the edge of the
solar system.