Showing posts with label dwarf planet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dwarf planet. Show all posts

27 April 2016

The Satellite of Makemake

Makemake is a dwarf planet in the outer edges of the solar system in the Kuiper Belt. It was discovered in March 2005, and announced by Mike Brown in July of 2005. It is about 2/3 the size of Pluto, so it is relatively small. However, it was recently discovered that Makemake has a companion body discovered in April of 2016 (from images taken in April of 2015 from the Hubble Space Telescope). It is not the only dwarf planet with a satellite.

Pluto has five, including Charon. Eris, the largest dwarf planet by mass (Pluto is larger by volume), has one (Dysnomia). Haumea has two. Satellites around dwarf planets may be pretty common.

15 June 2015

Is Pluto a Planet?


In the past, I know I've been adamant to say that Pluto is not a planet. You can read them again here, here, and here. However, I've thought about things and may be coming around to categorizing Pluto as a planet.


Before, I had always said that there are two types of planets: terrestrial planets, like Earth, and Jovian planets, like Jupiter. But what if we redefined a planet to have a third type: dwarf planets. These are bodies in the solar system that are too large to be asteroids or comets but are not necessarily big enough to have swept all the smaller bodies from its orbit (meaning it could have co-orbital bodies), have densities somewhere between Jovian planets and terrestrial planets, and can be found anywhere in the solar system.


I did discuss dwarf planets in more detail in a previous post, when discussing Pluto (see first link above), so I may have unwittingly decided already that Pluto is a planet. In fact, if we make Pluto a planet again (which probably will happen sooner rather than later), we will also have add a few more planets to our solar system.
Trans-Neptunian Objects (objects orbiting the Sun outside of Neptune's orbit)
Image Credit:

Eris and Makemake will definitely be added. Haumea, Sedna, and 2007 OR10 may as well. It all depends on where the lower limit of a dwarf planet's size will be if the IAU determines that.

This is what I love about science. It's a fluid subject that can easily change based on new information. I've changed my mind about Pluto (for now), and there may be other things I might change my mind about.

25 March 2015

Update on Pluto

A while back, I posted an argument about why Pluto is not a planet. Recently, there has been a movement to reinstate Pluto as one of the planets in our solar system. Let's delve into this a bit further.


From the previous post, here are the IAU definitions of a planet and a dwarf planet.
  • A planet is a spherical body that orbits the Sun and has cleared its orbit of other objects, i.e. it does not share an orbit with other bodies (not including moons).
  • A dwarf planet is a spherical body that orbits the Sun but has not cleared its orbit of other objects. They may co-orbit with other bodies. Many of the Trans-Neptunian Objects, Kuiper Belt Bodies, Oort Cloud comets may have the same semi-major axis as other objects, therefore are not planets.
As to these current definitions, we can see that Pluto is not a planet. All the arguments I made are in the previously linked post. A nice thing about science is that new information can change our understanding of nature and the universe. Science is a fluid subject. Our perceptions can alter. So that is why it may be important to reinvestigate the idea of a planet.


If we were to redefine what makes a planet, we should be clear on what is and what is not a planet. Pluto is smaller than seven moons in our solar system, including our Moon. However, Mercury is also smaller than the two largest moons, Ganymede (orbiting Jupiter) and Titan (orbiting Saturn). We can all agree that Ganymede, Titan, the three other Galilean satellites, Triton (orbiting Neptune), and our Moon are NOT planet, they are moons. They orbit around planets which in turn orbit around the Sun. Pluto, only orbits the Sun (though it can be argued that it also orbits around the common center of mass of its system (Pluto, Charon, and its other orbital companions).


If the IAU does change the definition of a planet, it will have to get rid of the idea of co-orbiting bodies that are a significant fraction of the largest body's mass and radius. Remember, Charon is about 11.6% the mass of Pluto and has a radius about half that of Pluto. Our Moon is only 1.2% the mass of Earth and has a radius just over a quarter of the Earth. Looking at all the large satellites of the gas giant planets shows that all of them are significantly smaller in comparison to their parent planet than our Moon is to the Earth.


So if the definition is changed, what other objects in our solar system will have to be redesignated as a planet? Pluto is obviously the first. Eris will also have to redefined as it is a larger body than Pluto. After that, it depends on what the lower limit the IAU wants to use. Makemake may become a planet, Ceres may as well, though if Ceres does get redefined, than all the trans-Neptunian objects larger than Ceres will have to be classified as planets. Not only that, we will have to add a third type of planetary body along with terrestrial and Jovian. This will have to be something in between, though that type is not really a bridge between terrestrial and Jovian.


At the moment, I personally like the definition we have for planets. It's clear, concise, and makes a lot of sense. But as I said before, science can change and our understanding of what is going on can help us make more informed conclusions. Only if the IAU changes the definition of a planet, only then will Pluto, Eris, and some of the other dwarf planets/minor planets in our solar system become full-fledged planets.


We will learn more about Pluto once New Horizons reaches the Plutonian system in July of 2015. Then we will know more about Pluto and its sisters and may be able to make more informed conclusions about what they are.

04 November 2014

Kuiper Belt




The Kuiper Belt is the region of the Solar System out beyond Neptune where the majority of our short-period comets are found. This is the region where we find the dwarf planets Pluto and Eris. The objects in this region besides being comets and dwarf planets are sometimes referred to as plutinos, KBOs (cubinos or Kuiper Belt Objects), or TNOs (Trans-Neptunian Objects). The belt is generally a torus centered on the Sun populated mostly by icy bodies as the heavier material generally settled in the interior part of the Solar System.

The comets that come from this region are called short-period comets as they have elliptical orbits with large eccentricities and periods of less than 200 years. They are disturbed in their orbits by large passing bodies, like Neptune that can send the object into in the inner solar system.

The Kuiper Belt is named after Gerard Kuiper as he proposed that there must be a disk that has icy remnants from the formation of the Solar System, much like there is a rocky disk in the inner Solar System containing leftovers from the birth of the Sun and planets, the Asteroid Belt. Disks found around other stars indicate that Kuiper Belt like features may be a consequence of planetary formation around stars.

The disk itself ranges from 30 AU to 100 AU in radius and contains at least several thousand objects, many of which are over 100 km in diamter.

31 October 2014

The Discovery Of Pluto

Believe it or not, the discovery of Pluto was by accident. Astronomers had noted anomalies in the orbit of Neptune, and much like they did with Uranus' orbit, thought there was a planet lying outside Neptune's orbit which would give rise to the anomalies.  So astronomers began to look for it.

It wasn't until Kansas-born Clyde Tombaugh (it's only important that I mention he's from Kansas because so am I), using stereo imaging of photographic plates found what he thought was the new planet. However, the new object he found was Pluto.
 

But after more measurements, the new planet was just not large enough to have the effect that they saw on Neptune. After some more calculations, Neptune's orbit was confirmed just using the masses of Neptune and Uranus.

So Pluto was there, but was not what was expected. If the orbit of Neptune had been calculated  correctly initially, it might have been a while longer before Pluto were discovered.

30 October 2014

Why Pluto is NOT a planet

First of all, I'm just going straight out and telling you. PLUTO IS NOT A PLANET. The International Astronomical Union made that clarification in 2006 and nothing will change that. I'm going to give you the reasons why I think Pluto is not a planet and why the IAU made the correction determination.

Secondly, when I was teaching college astronomy at the University of Pittsburgh, one of the things I also taught my students was that Pluto was not a planet. I last taught in 2005, a full year before the IAU made the announcement. Everything that I will talk about in here were the reasons I gave as to why Pluto is not a planet. Demoting Pluto did not diminish what Clyde Tombaugh accomplished in 1930 when he found Pluto at Lowell Observatory. There will be more of the discovery of Pluto in a later post.

One thing that argues against Pluto being a planet is its inclination to the equator of the Sun. In general, a planet should have a low orbital inclination as the Sun and planets were formed in the same nebula. As the nebula rotates and shrinks, all larger objects should stay in the same general plane. Here are the inclinations of the eight planets, Ceres, and Pluto
  • Mercury 3.38°
  • Venus 3.86°
  • Earth 7.155°
  • Mars 5.65°
  • Ceres 17.75°
  • Jupiter 6.09°
  • Saturn 5.51°
  • Uranus 6.48°
  • Neptune 6.43°
  • Pluto 11.88°
As you can see, Ceres (the largest asteroid or a dwarf planet in the Asteroid Belt) and Pluto both have orbital inclinations to the solar equator of more than 10 degrees. Earth has the largest of all the planets, but is inclined three degrees shallower. It would make sense since all the planets formed at the same time as the Sun and are the most massive bodies in the solar system after the Sun, that they would orbit within the equatorial plane of the Sun and not deviate much within that plane.

Another reason why Pluto is not a planet is it has a highly eccentric orbit. Objects that form in the same cloud as a star should be in a relatively circular orbit. (There really is no such thing as a perfect circle in science or nature. Variations in conditions can distort objects to make them less than perfect.) The nebula rotated which caused the cloud to collapse into a disk-like shape with the protosun at the center. Therefore, anything forming in that cloud will have a nearly circular orbit. Let's look at the different eccentricities of the same nine objects.
  • Mercury 0.206
  • Venus 0.007
  • Earth 0.017
  • Mars 0.093
  • Ceres 0.076
  • Jupiter 0.049
  • Saturn 0.056
  • Uranus 0.047
  • Neptune 0.009
  • Pluto 0.249
Looking at these eccentricities, all of them except Mercury and Pluto have eccentricities less than 0.1. Mercury's orbit is eccentric because of its proximity to the Sun and relativistic effects of the space that Mercury orbits in. Pluto is so much farther out, that relativistic effects do not affect it as much. Curvature of spacetime is a consequence of massive bodies that won't be explained here. You can always google the topic, or if you would like me to explain general relativity, comment below.

The density of Pluto is also a dead giveaway that Pluto is not a planet. 

Terrestrial Planets:
  • Mercury 5.427 g/cm³
  • Venus 5.243 g/cm³
  • Earth 5.514 g/cm³
  • Mars 3.934 g/cm³
Jovian Planets:
  • Jupiter 1.326 g/cm³
  • Saturn 0.687 g/cm³
  • Uranus 1.27 g/cm³
  • Neptune 1.638 g/cm³
Dwarf Planets:
  • Ceres 2.077 g/cm³
  • Pluto 2.03 g/cm³
  • Eris 2.52 g/cm³ (estimate)
  • Haumea 2.6 g/cm³ (estimate)
  • Makemake 2.3 g/cm³ (estimate)
Pluto's density is too low to be terrestrial, but too high to be Jovian. Based on its density, we know that Pluto is a combination of both icy material and rocky material, with slightly more ice than rock.

The last argument I can make about Pluto not being a planet is its size relative to multiple moons in our Solar System.
 
Trans-Neptunian Objects (objects orbiting the Sun outside of Neptune's orbit)
Image Credit:
 
If we were to include Ceres on this image, it would be smaller than Orcus (~800 km for Orcus and ~500km for Ceres).
 
The IAU has given a definition for a planet and a dwarf planet. 
  • A planet is a spherical body that orbits the Sun and has cleared its orbit of other objects, i.e. it does not share an orbit with other bodies (not including moons).
  • A dwarf planet is a spherical body that orbits the Sun but has not cleared its orbit of other objects. They may co-orbit with other bodies. Many of the Trans-Neptunian Objects, Kuiper Belt Bodies, Oort Cloud comets may have the same semi-major axis as other objects, therefore are not planets.

29 October 2014

Pluto, the Planet that is NOT a Planet

Rotating Face of Pluto taken by Hubble
Image Credit:
Pluto. Never in astronomy has there been a more controversial object that we have discovered in our Solar System, our galaxy, or even the Universe. When it was first discovered, it was thought to be the farthest planet in our Solar System. But as we learned more about it, we were able to determine that it is not, in fact, a planet.

But before we learn why Pluto is not a planet, let's get to know a few things about one of the farthest denizens of our Solar System. For one, it was actually discovered by accident, even though it was actively being searched for by astronomers. Astronomers had used the orbit of Neptune and found that its orbit did not match calculations of how Neptune should go around the Sun. They thought that there was an object orbiting outside Neptune's orbit that caused these anomalies and were looking for it.

Secondly, it has a very eccentric orbit. In fact, its orbit is so eccentric, that for portions of its year, Pluto is actually closer to the Sun than Neptune, but because of its highly inclined orbital plane, Neptune and Pluto are never in danger of colliding.

Pluto is tiny. It is smaller than the largest moons in our Solar System including our Moon. But despite its small size, it does have satellites orbiting around it, including the largest Plutonian satellite, Charon, though it would be more accurate to say that Pluto and Charon co-orbit the Sun.
Pluto in comparison to some moons of the Solar System
Image Credit:

It is an icy body, much like the objects in the Kuiper Belt and Oort Cloud. There is another Kuiper Belt objects that have a similar composition to Pluto, but it actually larger than it.

28 August 2014

1 Ceres



Ceres was the first asteroid discovered in the Asteroid Belt on 1 January 1801 by Giuseppe Piazzi. When he first discovered it, he thought it was a planet, as it was a common belief at the time that there might be a planet between Mars and Jupiter because of the large gap between the two planets.
Because there was not enough information to determine the orbit of Ceres, it wasn't confirmed to exist until December of 1801. After close observation of Ceres, it was determined that it was not a planet, but something new. It was then that William Herschel coined the term "asteroid" as the object had a star-like appearance so was difficult to distinguish from the background stars. However, after observing Ceres and other asteroids over the course of days and weeks, it was apparent that asteroids move faster in the sky than the stars since they are much closer to Earth.

Ceres is small compared to the planets and many satellites, but it is the largest object in the Asteroid Belt by a wide margin. 
  • It has a diameter of about 950 km or the size of Texas
  • It's mass is 9.47x10²° kg, or about 0.00016% of the Earth. Despite its mass, Ceres contains 25% of all the mass in the Asteroid Belt
  • It has a semi-major axis (orbital radius) of 2.76 AU
As shown in the opening picture, Ceres is relative spherical. Much like the planets, is an oblate spheroid with a wider diameter at the equator than the poles. This shows that it rotates on an axis uniformly. Other asteroids with irregular shapes kinda tumble and wobble in space as they rotate.

We've learned more about Ceres as telescopic observations became more sophisticated and advanced. Ceres does not fit into the three main types of asteroids mentioned in the previous post. In fact, like planets, it is differentiated (layered) with a rocky core, an icy mantel, and an outer crust.


For the next two centuries, Ceres was still considered an asteroid as there was no other category of object it fit in. It's official designation was 1 Ceres as it was the first asteroid discovered and Ceres is its proper name. However, in 2006 when Pluto was demoted from planet status to minor planet, it was concluded that Ceres should be upgraded. Ceres is now officially considered a dwarf planet. It is too small to be a planet (and where the lower limit to be considered a planet is still murky) but too large and too regularly shaped to be an asteroid.

One final weird thing discovered on Ceres is that it is slightly active. An object as small as Ceres should not have any sort of eruptions going on, but in January of 2014, the Herschel Space Telescope discovered water vapor plumes emitted from the surface. We will learn more about Ceres in the coming years when the space probe Dawn arrives at Ceres and begins its exploration. Ceres is also the third most likely spot for crewed missions to visit after the Moon and Mars.