Sharon Begley
|
Jun 14, 2007 01:27 PM
Alas, poor Pluto, the dissing just keeps on coming.
Last year, the erstwhile ninth planet was demoted because
astronomers had discovered a nearby object, now officially named Eris,
that was larger in diameter than Pluto. (According to the latest
measurements, Eris is 2,400 kilometers across, compared to Pluto’s
2,200.) If Pluto was a planet, then so was Eris—making it the tenth.
But instead of taking that route, which would have opened membership
in the club of planets to other large objects such as the asteroid
Ceres and Pluto’s own moon Charon, astronomers decided to get pickier
about what defines a planet. Pluto would hence be a “dwarf planet,” one
that orbits the Sun but that has insufficient mass to “gravitationally
dominate” its region of the solar system—that is, enough mass to sweep
away other stuff orbiting there. But heck, at least Pluto was the
heftiest, most massive dwarf.
Pluto fans who never got over last year’s ouster had better brace
themselves. In a paper in tomorrow’s issue of the journal Science,
astronomers Michael Brown (who discovered Eris in 2003) and Emily
Schaller of the California Institute of Technology report that Eris,
having gotten Pluto kicked out of the club of planets, is at it again.
Using the Hubble Space Telescope and the telescope at the Keck
Observatory, the Caltech astronomers calculate that Eris has a mass 27
percent greater than Pluto’s. That puts its density at 2 grams per
cubic centimeter, suggesting a composition of ice and rock very similar
to Pluto. “In addition to being the largest, Eris is also the most
massive known dwarf planet,” the scientists write. Any hope that Eris
is an air head—all diameter and no heft—is now gone.
“This was Pluto’s last chance to be the biggest thing found so far
in the Kuiper belt,” said Brown. “There was a possibility that Pluto
and Eris were roughly the same size, but these new results show that
it’s second place at best for Pluto.”
Pluto could not be reached for comment.
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