Pluto

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Pluto
Pluto-mosaic-true-color.jpg
Pluto. From New Horizons’ Long Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI). Released July 2015. A mosaic of four medium-resolution images with true color added.
Date of discovery February 18, 1930
Name of discoverer Clyde W. Tombaugh
Name origin Greco-Roman god of wealth and the underworld
Orbital characteristics
Primary Sun
Order from primary 10
Perihelion 29.65834067 AU
Aphelion 49.30503287 AU
Semi-major axis 39.48168677 AU
Titius-Bode prediction 77.2 AU
Circumference 188.925 AU
Orbital eccentricity 0.24880766
Sidereal year 248.09 a
Synodic year 366.73 da (1.004 a)
Avg. orbital speed 4.666 km/s
Inclination 17.14175° to the ecliptic
Rotational characteristics
Sidereal day -6.387230 da
Rotational speed 47.18 km/h
Axial tilt 119.591°
Physical characteristics
Mass 1.305 * 1022 kg (0.218% earth)
Density 1,870 kg/m³
Mean radius 1,185 km
Surface gravity 0.58 m/s² (0.0591 g)
Escape speed 1.2 km/s
Surface area 17,650,000 km² (3.460% earth)
Minimum temperature 33 K
Mean temperature 44 K
Maximum temperature 55 K
Number of moons 5 or more
This article is about the dwarf planet. For the Roman god, see Pluto (god).

134340 Pluto is a dwarf planet in the Kuiper belt of the outer solar system. It was discovered in 1930 by American astronomer Clyde Tombaugh. It is orbited by a large moon called Charon as well as by two smaller moons, Nix and Hydra. Charon was discovered in 1978.

Pluto was recognized as one of the nine major planets from its discovery. A group of astronomers from the International Astronomical Union reclassified it as a dwarf planet in 2006 after the discovery of Eris. Not all planetary scientists agree with this reclassification as there is still controversy over the IAU's own definition of what qualifies as a planet. Pluto is the Roman god of the underworld. In 2015 the U.S. spacecraft New Horizons passed through the Plutonian system.

Discovery[edit]

Pluto was discovered by American astronomer Clyde W. Tombaugh on February 18, 1930 at the Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona. Tombaugh's daughter Annette proposed the name of that object: Pluto. Pluto remains one of the only planets ever to have been discovered or named by Americans although the [International Astronomical Union|IAU]] now claims it is a dwarf planet

Tombaugh was searching for "Planet X," a planet beyond Neptune that was believed to be influencing Neptune's orbit. Percival Lowell, founder of the observatory where Tombaugh worked, had calculated possible sky positions for Planet X based on observations of Neptune's orbit. However, Tombaugh did not make use of Lowell's calculations. Instead, he used the observatory's telescope to photograph the opposition point to the sun every night for a year, thus conducting a full sky survey of the Zodiac.

When astronomers realized that Pluto is not large enough to influence Neptune's orbit, the search for Planet X was resumed. The idea of Planet X was debunked in 1989, when Voyager 2 flew by Neptune. NASA scientists determined that Neptune was significantly heavier than previously supposed, invalidating the earlier orbital calculations by Lowell and others.

Character[edit]

Pluto is smaller any of the eight of the major planets. NASA once thought it smaller than Eris, a recently discovered dwarf planet.[1] But that turns out not to be true. In fact, Pluto is the largest object in the Kuiper Belt.

It's name literally means "god of wealth" and is one of the two names for one of the brothers of Zeus; the other is Hades, or "god of the underworld." (The Romans used only the name Pluto for this god.) (To read more about the legend of Hades/Pluto the Olympian, read here.)

According to the International Astronomical Union, it no longer qualifies as a planet because it has not cleared its orbit of other objects. But the IAU decided that under circumstances at least one observer calls suspicious.

In 2015 the U.S. spacecraft New Horizons passed through the Plutonian system. New Horizons found many signs that are not consistent with the conventional favored theory of Pluto's origin. Pluto has mountains that have not eroded. That suggests the body is active. Pluto also has a frozen lake of carbon monoxide that no one has yet been able to explain.

The dwarf planet controversy[edit]

Pluto(center) with moon Charon. NASA image

The discovery of Eris, a scatter-disk body 27% more massive than Pluto, caused a controversy concerning what does, and what does not, constitute a planet. If Pluto were to retain its historical designation of "planet," then Eris would also qualify. But Eris was held not to qualify because it was in a neighborhood with multiple other objects, a situation similar to those of similar bodies in the asteroid belt, namely Ceres and Eris.

In 2006, the International Astronomical Union passed the following resolution:
RESOLUTION 5A

The IAU therefore resolves that planets and other bodies in our Solar System, except satellites, be defined into three distinct categories in the following way:

  • (1) A "planet"1 is a celestial body that
  • (a) is in orbit around the Sun,
  • (b) has sufficient mass for its self-gravity to overcome rigid body forces so that it assumes a hydrostatic equilibrium (nearly round) shape, and
  • (c) has cleared the neighborhood around its orbit.
  • (2) A "dwarf planet" is a celestial body that **(a) is in orbit around the Sun, **(b) has sufficient mass for its self-gravity to overcome rigid body forces so that it assumes a hydrostatic equilibrium (nearly round) shape2, **(c) has not cleared the neighborhood around its orbit, and **(d)is not a satellite.
  • (3) All other objects3, except satellites, orbiting the Sun shall be referred to collectively as "Small Solar System Bodies".

1The eight planets are: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.

2An IAU process will be established to assign borderline objects into either dwarf planet and other categories.

3These currently include most of the Solar System asteroids, most Trans-Neptunian Objects (TNOs), comets, and other small bodies.

The IAU further resolves:

  • Pluto is a "dwarf planet" by the above definition and is recognized as the prototype of a new category of Trans-Neptunian Objects 1.


1 An IAU process will be established to select a name for this category.

International Astronomical Union
[2][3]

Under those rather strict criteria, Pluto does not qualify. For that reason, Pluto is no longer considered a planet. It shares the new "dwarf planet" category with Eris, Ceres, Haumea and Makemake.[4]

But Walter T. Brown, of the Center for Scientific Creation, noted in an exclusive interview with the National Creationism Examiner, that the IAU leadership took up that resolution when only four percent of its membership could attend. Evidently the IAU makes no rules as to what portion of its voting membership constitutes a quorum. (Why they don't simply use the e-mail version of Roberts' Rules of Order, no one has asked them.)

Brown suspects the IAU wanted to demote Pluto, because Pluto violates, by its very existence, every conventional theory of planetary origin.

Earth and Mars as dwarf planets under the current International Astronomical Union definition[edit]

According to Number 1 (c) and 2 (c) of the IAU definition, also Earth and Mars wouldn't be planets because they haven't "cleared" their orbits as several asteroids are in their respective orbits, these asteroids are also called "quasi-moons" of Earth and Mars. The IAU precluded this possibility by arbitrarily listing the earth and mars as planets in spite of the current definition (see the quote in the above section: "1The eight planets are: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune."). This, however, calls into question the "scientific" basis of downgrading Pluto to a dwarf plant as this conflicting standard(of confirming earth and mars as planets while classifying Pluto as a dwarf planet) suggests it is merely the opinion of the IAU that Pluto is not a planet [5]

Physical characteristics[edit]

False-color image of Pluto showing frozen lake of carbon monoxide (green) in the western lobe of Tombaugh Regio (the "heart shape").
Pluto has a density of 2,030 kg/m3, comparable to that of Ceres. It also has a brownish-red color, like that of iron rust. Significantly, Charon, its innermost moon, does not have that color.

Orbital characteristics[edit]

Pluto lies in a highly eccentric (nearly 25 percent) orbit around the sun. In fact, its perihelion lies inside the semi-major axis of the orbit of Neptune.[6]


Conventional astronomers attribute the rust color of Pluto to a class of substances called "tholins" (literally, "mud-colored stuff") forming from the bombardment of hypothesized atmospheric constituents by ultraviolet radiation. But Walter T. Brown has another theory: the substance giving Pluto its rust color really is iron rust. Which, he says, formed far closer to the Sun than Pluto now orbits. (More on that below.)

The most remarkable, even shocking, finding on Pluto is the lake of frozen carbon monoxide in the western "lobe" of a heart-shaped region ("Tombaugh Regio," named for the discoverer).

Orbital characteristics of its moons[edit]

Pluto and Charon make a wide binary. The barycenter of the Pluto-Charon system lies above its surface, not within it. Remarkably, the eccentricity of the Pluto-Charon wide binary is nearly zero. The eccentricities of the orbits of Pluto's other known satellites (Styx, Nix, Kerberos, and Hydra) are slightly larger than zero, but are all less than one percent.

Pluto's origin[edit]

Problems for uniformitarianism[edit]

Pluto was initially supposed to have been a moon of Neptune. But with the discovery of Charon in 1978, and the subsequent discoveries of its other moons Hydra and Nix, that theory became far less plausible.

Another hypothesis has held that Pluto entered the solar system from outside, and the Sun captured it. But if such a mass dived into the solar system from outside, then it would have followed a hyperbolic path. That it did not pass back out of the solar system to complete the hyperbola begs explanation.

But the physical characteristics of Pluto, and the orbital characteristics of its satellites, present the worst problems.[7] The chief conventional theory to explain Charon, is that an impactor struck Pluto and caused it to eject Charon. This begs two questions:

  1. How could Charon and Pluto settle into nearly perfect circular orbits around their common barycenter?
  2. Why does Pluto have a rust color and Charon doesn't?

For that matter, why do the other moons have nearly circular orbits, inclining only slightly from Pluto's equator?

The rust color alone presents a problem. Conventional theory says the rust color comes from tholins that form from solar ultraviolet light falling on an atmosphere of methane, nitrogen, and ammonia. (Conventional scientists infer the composition of the Plutonian atmosphere strictly from spectrographic data from Earth-bound telescopes. The New Horizons spacecraft (see below) carries its own spectrophotometer.)

The carbon monoxide finding presents the worst problem. Conventional scientists simply cannot explain it.

The Hydroplate Theory[edit]

The Hydroplate theory of the Great Flood says that Pluto, Charon, and all the other moons of Pluto formed from material ejected from earth in the early stage of the Flood. As this material passed beyond the earth, it fell out of Earth's gravitational influence. Then and only then could it accrete. Pluto simply received a higher proportion of iron-containing rock than did Charon.

The two bodies were also moving through an environment with a large quantity of gas in it. Pluto especially acquired a vast atmosphere (by one account, more than 11,000 km in extent). The atmospheric pressure would set up a steep gradient between the day and night sides of Pluto. In addition, Pluto and Charon could act like solar sails, gaining momentum from light pressure. All these influences gave those bodies extra momentum to push them into a close encounter with a gas giant, most likely Jupiter. The two bodies, and probably the four other bodies that would form the rest of the system, passed close to Jupiter, then fell south of the ecliptic. That explains the argument of perihelion greater than 90 degrees.

The highly eccentric orbit of the Pluto-Charon system around the sun, is typical of the orbits of the largest trans-Neptunian objects.

Brown explains the rust color this way: Pluto has iron on its surface. The sun, acting on atmospheric water vapor, dissociated this and produced oxygen. Oxygen reacts with iron to form rust. But this change had to happen far closer to the sun than even the current perihelion of Pluto.

The carbon monoxide finding excites Brown most of all. This shows, he says, that Pluto formed from Great Flood ejecta, containing uprooted trees and shrubs from the dense forests that originally covered the pre-Flood earth. The heat of the accretion of that mass started a fire. A wood fire, burning in such a confined space, typically produces carbon monoxide, not carbon dioxide. The frozen lake is the product of those early confined fires.

Observation and Exploration[edit]

On January 19, 2006, the New Horizons mission was launched. Lead investigator Alan Stern and his team collected one U.S. Customary ounce of the ashes of Clyde Tombaugh, sealed them in a canister, and installed this on the upper deck of the New Horizons probe. Alan Stern inscribed it thus:

Interned herein are remains of American Clyde W. Tombaugh, discoverer of Pluto and the solar system's "third zone." Adelle and Muron's boy, Patricia's husband, Annette and Alden's father, astronomer, teacher, punster, and friend: Clyde W. Tombaugh (1906-1997).[8]

Pluto is its prime target, but mission planners are considering plans to study at least one other Kuiper belt object.[9][10]

On 15 January 2015, New Horizons began its final approach to Pluto. On 14 July 2015, New Horizons passed directly through the Plutonian system and took the best photographs of it to date. Mission controllers expect New Horizons to transmit its thousands of high-resolution photographs and other data by the end of 2016.

New Horizons now awaits further orders to alter its course to reconnoiter any other Kuiper Belt object it might be able to reach.

Evidence for a young universe[edit]

During the New Horizons mission, it was found that Pluto had far fewer craters than expected for an object that is supposedly billions of years old, and it was also found to have a nitrogen atmosphere that is leaking away at too fast a rate for it to be millions or billions of year old.[11]

In popular fiction[edit]

Science fiction author Larry Niven once speculated on an "earlier generation" race of extraterrestrial beings that controlled the galaxy until it suffered mutual annihilation in a war with a revolting slave race. As part of that scenario, a member of that "slaver race" once had to make an emergency "landing" in a crippled spacecraft that could no longer brake to a safe approach speed. He then set a course for the earth, bailed out of his ship, and left the ship's autopilot with orders to crash-land on Neptune. Instead of that happening, the ship struck a moon of Neptune hard enough to knock it out of orbit; that moon became known as Pluto.

Shane Johnson (Ice: The Greatest Truths Hide in the Deepest Shadows) correctly guessed in 2002 that Pluto would not have existed before the Great Flood.

Pluto has also been a subject of speculation involving future efforts by humanity to colonize that body, efforts often complicated by the presence of extraterrestrial "campers" or even of pathogens, usually viruses, native to Pluto. None of that speculation can ever be tenable anymore, after the New Horizons mission.

Moons of Pluto.jpg

Satellites[edit]

See above.

References[edit]

  1. http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/070614_eris_mass.html
  2. "IAU0602: the Final IAU Resolution on the Definition of 'Planet' Ready for Voting," International Astronomical Union, 2005. Accessed January 14, 2008.
  3. https://www.iau.org/static/resolutions/Resolution_GA26-5-6.pdf International Astronomical Union, 2005. Accessed February 9, 2022
  4. http://www.iau.org/public_press/news/detail/iau0807/
  5. https://www.iau.org/static/resolutions/Resolution_GA26-5-6.pdf International Astronomical Union, 2005. Accessed February 9, 2022
  6. http://science.jrank.org/pages/5352/Pluto.html
  7. Hurlbut TA, "Pluto: accidental creation," Creationism Examiner, 11 July 2015.
  8. Mullen J, "Pluto discoverer's ashes are aboard New Horizons probe," Cable News Network. Published 14 July 2015. Retrieved 5 August 2015.
  9. Jenner, Lynn. "NASA - New Horizons." NASA, October 9, 2007. Accessed July 3, 2008.
  10. New Horizons official site, ed. Tricia Talbert/NASA. First accessed 10 July 2015.
  11. Pluto’s Young Surface. Answers in Genesis (from Answers Magazine). October 1, 2015. Retrieved November 4, 2016.

Related links[edit]

  • Hamilton, Calvin J. "Entry for 'Pluto'." Views of the Solar System, 2007. Accessed January 21, 2008.

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