Last week,
various media reported that exhibits at the Rose Center for Earth and Space in
New York City give short shrift to Pluto, with the center omitting the
far-flung ice ball from planetary displays of our solar system and implying
that Pluto is not a planet. On Friday, Neil de Grasse Tyson, director of the
Hayden Planetarium at the center, explained the center's treatment of Pluto in
an open letter to the Cambridge-Conference Network, an international network of
asteroid researchers and planetary scientists who have advocated a change in
Pluto's status for more than two years.
With
permission from CCNet, Dr. Tyson's letter is reproduced below:
Regarding our
exhibits in New York City's new Rose Center for Earth and Space, I am surprised
and impressed by the amount of recent media attention triggered by our decision
to treat Pluto differently from the other planets in the solar system.
I am surprised
because our exhibit has been in place since opening day, 19 February 2000, and
our treatment didn't seem to be newsworthy at the time. I am impressed that
people feel so strongly about Pluto that much time and attention had been
devoted to it in print and on the air.
The New
York Times' front page article, which ignited the recent firestorm, donned
a title that was somewhat afield of what we actually did, and which I would
like to clarify. The title read "Pluto Not a Planet? Only in New
York," which implied that we kicked Pluto out of the solar system and that
we are alone in this action and that, perhaps more humorously, Pluto wasn't big
enough to make it in NYC.
I have
written previously on the subject, in an essay titled "Pluto's Honor"
(Natural History, February 1999) where I review how the classification
of "planet" in our solar system has changed many times, most notably
with the 1801 discovery of the first of many new planets in orbit between Mars
and Jupiter. These new planets, of course, later became known as asteroids. In
the essay, arguing in part by analogy with the Asteroid Belt, I argued strongly
that Pluto, being half ice by volume, should assume its rightful status as the
King of the Kuiper Belt of comets. Apart from my views expressed there, I have
a different sort of responsibility to the public as director of the Hayden
Planetarium and as project scientist of the Rose Center for Earth & Space.
That
responsibility is as an educator for a facility that has received an average of
1,000 people per hour over the past eleven months. For the exhibit on
planets in our "Hall of the Universe," rather than use the word
planet as a classifier, we essentially abandon the ill-defined concept and
simply group together families of like-objects. In other words, instead of
counting planets or declaring what is a planet and what is not, we organize the
objects of the solar system into five broad families: the terrestrial planets,
the Asteroid Belt, the Jovian planets, the Kuiper Belt and the Oort Cloud. With
this approach, numbers do not matter and memorized facts about planets do not
matter. What matters is an understanding of the structure and layout of the
solar system. On other panels, in an exercise in comparative planetology, we
highlight rings, storms, the greenhouse effect, surface features and orbits
with discussions that draw from all members of the solar system where
interesting and relevant.
Our
intro-exhibit panel meets the visitor's expectations head-on:
------------------
"What
is a planet?"
"In
our solar system, planets are the major bodies orbiting the Sun. Because we
cannot yet observe other planetary systems in similar detail, a universal
definition of a planet has not emerged. In general, planets are massive enough
for their gravity to make them spherical, but small enough to avoid nuclear
fusion in their cores."
------------------
A second
panel, describes and depicts the layout of the solar system:
-----------------
"Our
Planetary System"
Five
classes of objects orbit our Sun. The inner terrestrial planets are separated
from the outer gas giant planets by the Asteroid Belt. Beyond the outer planets
is the Kuiper Belt of comets, a disk of small icy worlds including Pluto. Much
more distant, reaching a thousand times farther than Pluto, lies the Oort Cloud
of comets."
-----------------
Our goal was
to get teachers, students and the average visitor to leave our facility
thinking about the solar system as a landscape of families rather than as an
exercise in mnemonic recitation of planet sequences.
That being
said, I have benefited from some reasoned feedback on what we have done. As
many are already aware, we use our giant 87-foot (26.5-meter) sphere (housing
the Hayden Space Theater in the upper half and a recreation of the first three
minutes of the Big Bang in the lower half) as an exhibit unto itself. We invoke
it to compare the relative sizes of things in the universe for a walk-around
"powers of 10" journey that descends from the observable universe all
the way to atomic nuclei. About midway in the journey you come upon the size
scale where the sphere represents the Sun. On that scale, hanging from the
ceiling, are the Jovian planets (the most highly photographed spot in the
facility) while a set of four small orbs are also on view, attached to the
railing. These are the terrestrial planets. No other members of the solar
system are represented here. This entire exhibit is about size, and not much
else. But the absence of Pluto (even though the exhibit clearly states that
it's the Jovian and terrestrial planets that are represented) has led about 10
percent of our visitors to wonder where it is.
In the
interest of sound pedagogy we have decided to explore two paths: 1) Possibly
add a sign at the right spot on the size scales exhibit that simply asks
"Where's Pluto" and gives some attention to why it was not included
among the models. 2) We are further considering a more in-depth treatment of
the life and times of Pluto to add to our kiosks, which contain our
computer-searchable data base of current astrophysics news that we display in a
timely fashion on a video "bulletin" wall. This material might even
contain a sampling of the various points-of-view expressed on how planets
should be counted for those who feel compelled to do so.
I close with
the opinion that a mid-ex style mission to Pluto might resonate much more
deeply with the public and with Congress if instead of saying "we must
complete the reconnaissance of solar system's planets by sending probes to
Pluto," we say "we must begin the reconnaissance of a newly
discovered, and hitherto uncharted swath of real estate in our solar system
called the Kuiper Belt, of which, Pluto reigns as king."
Respectfully
Submitted,
Neil deGrasse
Tyson
Department of
Astrophysics & Director, Hayden Planetarium Division of Physical Sciences
American
Museum of Natural History