• @dQw4w9WgXcQ
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    01 month ago

    The “big” deal is that a ton of celestial bodies of comparable size to pluto would have to be considered either as planets or as general debris. Finding a clear definition which would include pluto as a planet and not include other stuff would be very impractical and possibly nearly impossible.

    But the biggest fuck up was to name a non-planet a “dwarf planet”.

    • @Olhonestjim@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      I’m well aware of the existence of countless dwarf planets in the solar system, and the naming issues that arose from the discovery.

      I don’t mind that they called them dwarf planets. But I don’t know why everyone got so upset about it. It sounds like just another class of planet to me, which seems quite appropriate.

      I agree that they marketed the change about as poorly as they could.

      • @dQw4w9WgXcQ
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        11 month ago

        Sure, people have taken the matter way too personal. That’s mostly people who have a nostalgic relationship to their childhood classes about “the 9 planets”.

        As I’ve read, they made the definition in the particular way to remove gray areas of inaccurate meassurements. A celestial body shouldn’t be wrongly classified due to being a few kilometres larger than some limit, then be reclassified later due to better meassurements. Planets need to be somewhat spherical, orbit a star and clear their orbit from significant debris. They made a great system which doesn’t leave big gray areas. A planet is defined in a well thought out way by people way smarter than me.

        And then they go and call the non-planets “dwarf planets”.

        • @Olhonestjim@lemmy.world
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          11 month ago

          I’ve heard some push to just call them all “Worlds.” Planets, moons, asteroids, etc. and all, which is also fine by me.