ChatterBank7 mins ago
Planets and moons
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Is Pluto a planet?
Does the earth have 4 moons?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.As Salamander points out, there is some doubt as to whether Pluto is a planet. This os for various reasons, offset orbital plane and also it ducks inside the orbit of Neptune occasionally. If it where discovered today it may well not be classed as a planet but as it wasn't it is treated as a planet.
Pluto is either yes a planet (if you define it to be one) or no, not a planet (if you define it to be not a planet). If it is defined as a planet, then it would be fair to count Sedna, Xena and Quaoar as planets as well. I prefer to think of it as not a planet, because it is substantially smaller than the other planets, and it has an unusual eccentric orbit. The danger of classifying it as a planet would be to open the floodgates for a large number of other Kuiper Belt Objects to be called planets in future if they are discovered. I think that the most sensible way of distinguishing between planets and non-planets would be to have an arbitrary limit on size e.g. 3000 mile diameter.
Interesting point you make bernardo but how and where do you draw the line?
Using the 3000 mile diameter would start a new argument as to whether Callisto,
Ganymede, and Titan in our own Solar System should be reclassified as planets rather than moons.
No doubt the debate on the subject will outlive us all.