Xena size is smaller than thought
Xena size is smaller than thought
Article
disturbing thing is that, again, astronomers pretend to know more than they actually do. I mean, this is what they see, and this is what they show on presentations. kind of makes me re-think some things...
disturbing thing is that, again, astronomers pretend to know more than they actually do. I mean, this is what they see, and this is what they show on presentations. kind of makes me re-think some things...
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Hello Makc
also link
http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/newsde ... s/2006/16/
http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/newsde ... /16/image/
Its amazing the objects we find.
also link
http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/newsde ... s/2006/16/
http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/newsde ... /16/image/
Its amazing the objects we find.
Harry : Smile and live another day.
- orin stepanek
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Yeah, after a dozen years of getting there, austronauts would be like bored-to-fu-kin-death so they will enjoy this endless game, water electrolysis and synthesis. 2H2O->2H2+O2, 2H2+O2->2H2O, 2H2O->2H2+O2, 2H2+O2->2H2O, 2H2O->2H2+O2, 2H2+O2->2H2O, ...just imagine all the fun yayharry wrote:Water is made from hydrogen and oxygen imagine the possibbilties.
Re: Xena size is smaller than thought
Um... that's simply a mock-up image showing the relative scales of the objects. They're not presuming to know much in the way of surface details of Xena or most of these other objects.
Don't just stand there, get that other dog!
Anybody read the article on planet-finding in last month's Discover Magazine? There was an interesting comparison between the labels "planet" and "continent." The article pointed out that there's no scientific way to classify something as a "true continent." After all, isn't Asia physically connected to Europe with only an imaginary line separating the two? Couldn't Australia be a continent? Madagascar has its own continental plate...why is it not a continent? And on it goes, ect ect.
Planets are the same way. What defines a planet? Size? Moons? Whether or not it lies in the elliptic?
My own two cents: I will go with the idea mentioned in the article that the 8 planets that lie within the elliptic are "Major Planets" and everything else is a "Minor Planet" or "Planetoid." Easy enough, eh?
8)
Planets are the same way. What defines a planet? Size? Moons? Whether or not it lies in the elliptic?
My own two cents: I will go with the idea mentioned in the article that the 8 planets that lie within the elliptic are "Major Planets" and everything else is a "Minor Planet" or "Planetoid." Easy enough, eh?
8)
Harry, I doubt even your imaginary "light-speed ship" would have trouble with debris. The relatively small amount of material in the Kuiper belt and the vast amount of space it encompasses means the chances you'd even find a good-sized chunk is pretty small. In fact the article I mentioned suggests that once you get out into the Oort cloud (which is even more dispersed) the distance between objects is on the order of an AU or so.
- orin stepanek
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I don't think size should determine weather a planet is a planet. When Pluto was discovered it was called a planet. So when a planet was discovered; it was called a planet. Pluto's diameter is 1/2 the size of Mercury. Mercury is 1/3 that of Earth. Earth is 1/10th that of Saturn. http://www.sizes.com/natural/planets.htm
If it's round and orbits the Sun it should be a planet. If it's irregular; a planetoid or asteroid. If it orbits a planet; it's a moon or satellite. That's simple enough. Why make it complicated. My thoughts anyway.
Orin
If it's round and orbits the Sun it should be a planet. If it's irregular; a planetoid or asteroid. If it orbits a planet; it's a moon or satellite. That's simple enough. Why make it complicated. My thoughts anyway.
Orin
Pluto should be grandfathered 'legacy planet status', regardless of how they determine what should be called a 'planet' or a 'minor body'. We've always called it a planet, it was discovered as one, might as well just leave it be. It's not a small object, either... personally, they ought to use Pluto as the minimum size for an indepenantlly orbiting object to be labelled a planet; any KBO they find bigger than Pluto gets the 'planet' label. I don't see what the big deal is.
Don't just stand there, get that other dog!