MAPA! Trump’s NASA Administrator wants to bring back Pluto as a planet in our solar system

MAPA! Trump’s NASA Administrator wants to bring back Pluto as a planet in our solar system

NASA Administrator Jared Isaacmanwants to put an end to a decades-long debate among scientists. IsPlutoaplanetor not?

The Independent US

Isaacman says it should be — but it hasn’t been one for 20 years. That’s because of a decision fromthe International Astronomical Union, which said it met the definition of a dwarf planet due to the other objects that orbit chilly Pluto. But, critics point out that Earth and Jupiter share orbital space withasteroidsand research since 2006 has revealed more about Pluto.

“I am very much in the camp of [making] Pluto a planet again,” the billionaire SpaceX astronaut told Kansas Sen. Jerry Moran Tuesday in ahearingon Capitol Hill, adding that some papers were underway to “revisit this discussion.”

He had previouslyrespondedto aposton the social media platform X asking for him to make Pluto a planet again. “We are looking into this,” Isaacman wrote. The position also has continued support fromformer Administrator Jim Bridenstine.

However, experts on Pluto remain very much divided on the issue.

NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman said he was on the side of Pluto becoming a planet in our Solar System again. But experts remain at odds (Reuters)

“While NASA administrators are free to wax nostalgic for the days when Pluto was a planet, the actual scientists working in the field will continue to try to explain and classify objects in the solar system in the way that actually helps us understand the world in which we live,” Mike Brown, a professor of planetary astronomy at the California Institute of Technology, toldThe Independentin an email.

Brown, who announced in 2016 that he had found evidence fora ninth planetat 5,000 times the mass of Pluto,had a handin the International Astronomical Union’s decision andwrote a book about killing Pluto’s status as a planet in 2011.

The union acknowledges that its decision continues to fuel intense emotions — but that its definition of what makes a planet remains accurate, a spokesperson also toldThe Independent.

“We understand that many people feel Pluto was ‘demoted; but in fact, Pluto became the leading object of a new family of solar system bodies,” Ramasamy Venugopal, press and media coordinator for the International Astronomical Union, wrote in an emailed statement. “...Scientific classifications are determined through international consensus and evidence-based processes. While they are not subject to unilateral change, they can be amended if the supporting evidence changes.”

Adam Frank, a professor of astrophysics at the University of Rochester, said that the science behind demoting Pluto was “really important and really exciting.” Frank wrote a pieceinForbeson Tuesday telling people to quit “whining” about Pluto’s fate.

“Pluto is part of the rest of the solar system, the outer parts that are construction debris left over from building the planets. We didn’t know this just 30 years ago,” he toldThe Independent.

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Pluto's 'heart' is captured by NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft in July 2015 (NASA/JHUAPL/SwRI)

Still, others are not as settled on the terminology.

“Of course Pluto's a planet, butit isa dwarf planet, a subspecies of planet. The argument seems to swirl about those who wish to say whether dwarf planets are or are not planets. This is a waste of time,” Bill McKinnon, Director of the McDonnell Center for the Space Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis, toldThe Independent. “Pluto is part of the rest of the solar system, the outer parts that are construction debris left over from building the planets. We didn’t know this just 30 years ago.”

“Pluto is round, has an atmosphere, active geology and five (!) moons. What more does a planet need?” he asked, noting that he wasn’t trying to pretend it’s as big or in the same category as Mars or Earth.

Pluto was discovered in 1930 by astronomer Clyde Tombaugh and named – after the Greek god of the underworld – by an 11-year-old English girl named Venetia Burney, according toNASA. It was declared the ninth planet in our solar system.

Although it is only about 1,400 miles wide – half the width of the U.S. – recent findings show that itmay harbor a deep ocean,contain an “active” heartandhave icy mountainsrising as high as 11,000 feet.

But, the thing is that there are many other dwarf planets out there. The union has only recognized five so far, butmore than 100may wait to be discovered, the space agency notes. And Ceres, which was also previously classified as a planet, is closer to Earth and is the largest object in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.

NASA scientists sent an unmanned spacecraft to fly by Pluto in 2015, capturing images of its icy mountains (Getty)

“It’s easier to have a solar system with eight planets than with, say, 12 or more if all the Pluto-sized bodies get in the mix. If Pluto is a planet again, things get complicated for all those other dwarf planets,” Adeene Denton, a geologist and planetary scientist who worked onresearchabout Pluto’s heart, toldThe Independent. “I personally subscribe to what’s sometimes called the geologic/geophysical definition of a planet – if it’s big enough to have its own active geology, it’s a planet!”

Denton’s colleague Erik Ian Asphaug, a planetary science professor at the University of Arizona, said that the formal definition of a planet “has a lot of problems.”

“If one day we discover an Earth-mass planet full of inhabitants, orbiting a super-Jupiter, it would not be a planet according to the IAU — how silly is that!” he said.

To once again be officially labeled one of the planets of our solar system, it would need the backing of the union. As of today, that looks largely unlikely.

But for many, Pluto has remained a planet — if only in heart and mind.

“When Pluto was discovered at Lowell Observatory in 1930, it was classified as a planet. In the hearts and minds of many scientists and the public, it has remained a beloved planet, despite its reclassification to a dwarf planet in 2006,” Amanda Bosh, the the Executive Director of Arizona’s Lowell Observatory toldThe Independent.

 

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