Is There A 10th Planet?
Is There A 10th Planet?
(CNN) -- Scientists may have discovered the solar system's 10th planet, more than 3 billion kilometers further away from the sun than Pluto.
NASA is set to make an official announcement later Monday U.S. time.
The object -- about 10 billion kilometers from Earth -- has been given the provisional name of Sedna after the Inuit goddess of the sea.
Dr. Michael Brown of the California Institute of Technology and his team of astronomers, using the recently launched high power Spitzer Space Telescope, found Sedna during an ongoing three-year outer solar system project.
The Tenagra Observatory in Arizona was used to provide a verifying second set of measurements for the object.
Sedna is the largest object to be found circling the sun since Pluto was discovered in 1930.
The discovery has also sparked debate over what constitutes a planet.
Initial details indicated Sedna to be made of ice and rock and to be of a smaller size than Pluto, with a diameter of almost 2,000 km.
Many astronomers say Pluto, with a diameter of 2,300 km, is too small to be a termed a planet and is actually just one of many minor objects in the outer reaches of the solar system.
But those who argue Pluto is a planet are likely to push the claim for Sedna to become the 10th planet in the solar system.
Dr. Brown will present the discovery during a NASA briefing on Monday at 1:00 p.m. EST (1800 GMT).
The Spitzer Space Telescope was launched in August last year and is the fourth of NASA's Great Observatories. The program also includes the Hubble Space Telescope.
Read the rest here cocksuckers
Discuss, you damn geeks!
NASA is set to make an official announcement later Monday U.S. time.
The object -- about 10 billion kilometers from Earth -- has been given the provisional name of Sedna after the Inuit goddess of the sea.
Dr. Michael Brown of the California Institute of Technology and his team of astronomers, using the recently launched high power Spitzer Space Telescope, found Sedna during an ongoing three-year outer solar system project.
The Tenagra Observatory in Arizona was used to provide a verifying second set of measurements for the object.
Sedna is the largest object to be found circling the sun since Pluto was discovered in 1930.
The discovery has also sparked debate over what constitutes a planet.
Initial details indicated Sedna to be made of ice and rock and to be of a smaller size than Pluto, with a diameter of almost 2,000 km.
Many astronomers say Pluto, with a diameter of 2,300 km, is too small to be a termed a planet and is actually just one of many minor objects in the outer reaches of the solar system.
But those who argue Pluto is a planet are likely to push the claim for Sedna to become the 10th planet in the solar system.
Dr. Brown will present the discovery during a NASA briefing on Monday at 1:00 p.m. EST (1800 GMT).
The Spitzer Space Telescope was launched in August last year and is the fourth of NASA's Great Observatories. The program also includes the Hubble Space Telescope.
Read the rest here cocksuckers
Discuss, you damn geeks!
- Walks with the Snails
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If it's even smaller than Pluto, I seriously doubt it wil be classified as a planet. I mean, there had even been a big discussion about Pluto, and this one is even smaller...
No chance.
No chance.
I'm living up here where the air is thin, and gravity doesn't get you down
I'm living up here and I'm watching your universe cooling down.
I'm living up here and I'm watching your universe cooling down.
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No, they've found lots of "large" objects floating around out there, this is just larger than most. It's a new one that the Spitzer telescope picked up. The others are all classified as asteroids, but this one isn't too small, so it's an if yeah?Bleusilences wrote:It<s planet X, it's been discover for at least 10 years but there was a debate back then if it was really a planet or only a huge asteroid. Seem they decided it's a planet...
I don't see why the hell it shouldn't be a planet, either way it's an entirely arbitrary decision, there's no cosmic "planet threshold" to decide whether it is or isn't, in truth. And on top of that it would be cool to have another planet, so there we go, I declare it a planet.
A 10th planet sounds kind of cool I agree. The same number as fingers in my hands so its easier to count. But if its really a planet or just one big asteroid is dificult to tell. And naming it after some frozen god seems apropriate but breaking a venerable tradition I dont know if its right.
Carpe jugulum.
How could it be wrong? We made up the tradition in the first place. Same reason there's no reason that this shouldn't be a planet, we made up the idea of calling things planets in the first place, so the difference between planets and asteriods is all in our heads anyway. Babam, 10th planet here we come.
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Yeah, but you know what happens then. All the other asteroids want to get in and do, Jupiter and Saturn get snotty and say the planet club isn't what it used to be and go on to make a new word for "real planets" and then Earth has to kiss their ass to get in because we're not a big old scary gas giant. Best to keep the riff-raff away now before it comes to that.
I beleive that it could be considered to be a 10th planet... but anything that is trapped in the sun's gravitational pull and orbits without just flying into the sun could be considered to be a planet too... They did say it was much smaller than Pluto.
When I first heard this on the news I immediatly though "OMFG PLANET X IS FOR REAL!" (not really, but I thought of "planet X")
When I first heard this on the news I immediatly though "OMFG PLANET X IS FOR REAL!" (not really, but I thought of "planet X")
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This 10th planet debate has been around for a long time..Early 90's at least...I thought that whatever was out there had already been declared a planet.
I never noticed anything new on the solar system maps in class, though.
If this is indeed a planet, more power to it. Now we can make a couple billion dollars marketing "The Tenth Planet" movies. "It Came from Planet Ten" "Outpost Sedna," etc...
I never noticed anything new on the solar system maps in class, though.
If this is indeed a planet, more power to it. Now we can make a couple billion dollars marketing "The Tenth Planet" movies. "It Came from Planet Ten" "Outpost Sedna," etc...
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CENTER! FLAT! ABIDE BY CHRISTIAN LAW! WE ARE THE MASTER PLANET!
off topic? OMG YOU'VE BEEN CENSORED... yet you're still posting. MYSTARY!!!!
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I can't believe I'm saying this, but I totally agree with you.Walks with the Snails wrote:No. Planets are named after Roman gods, silly. 'Nuff said. Did the Inuits ever get cool enough to be able to crush most of the known world under their heel? Might as well call it Oprah or something.
Why not call it Vesta, Minerva, Maia, Vulcan, Ceres or best of all (~ the female version of Pluto) Proserpine?
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