Nine has been a recurring number throughout this Year of Pluto. Ironically, this day marks yet another significant ninth—the ninth anniversary of the controversial IAU planet definition and wrongful exclusion of Pluto from the roster of planets.
That
decision can be compared to studies of climate change commissioned by oil
companies. The scientists doing the study know the hand that feeds them, which
is why they decide on the conclusion they want first, then make the study fit
the result they favor.
A
majority of the 424 IAU members who voted that day first decided they wanted
Pluto out, then concocted a definition that gave them their desired results.
A
year ago on this day, I ended my blog entry with the following sentence: “Next
August 24, we will have the most clear idea yet of just how alive a planet one
astronomer prematurely wrote off as dead is.”
And
we do.
Only
five percent of the data taken by New Horizons’ seven instruments at the Pluto
system in one day has been returned, but it is enough to confirm that planet
Pluto is very much alive. Geologically, its lack of craters points to a world
that is constantly being resurfaced, a world with some type of internal heat
source, possible cryovolcanism, and maybe even a subsurface ocean.
Pluto’s
active geology has stumped scientists who previously thought such activity is
generated by tidal forces from a nearby giant planet. That is the case for
large moons of the solar system’s gas giants. But Pluto and Charon have no
nearby gas giant, so tidal forces cannot account for its geological activity.
Most
scientists expected to find a dead rock so far away from the Sun and from any
gas or ice giants. But Pluto is more geologically active than Mars, and even
Charon shows evidence of geological activity.
On a
human level, Pluto, with its prominent bright heart, has captured the hearts of
people worldwide in a way they will not likely soon forget. It is one thing for
us to love Pluto. It is a completely different thing when Pluto, in its most
prominent image, appears to be sending a love note to us.
And
yet, another IAU General Assembly has come and gone with hardly an
acknowledgement of the amazing feat of humanity sending a probe to Pluto and
the amazing world that probe revealed.
The
only mention of New Horizons at the General Assembly was an article chastising
the mission team for naming features on Pluto and Charon with names that may
not be approved by the IAU, leaving fans bitterly disappointed!
A
decade ago, the discovery of Eris presented new information that warranted
opening the discussion of what is a planet, but the findings at Pluto are far
more encompassing in telling us about these small outer worlds—and yet, no one
at the General Assembly found a need to re-open this discussion.
Beyond
the IAU leadership, this summer has seen a plethora of articles published on
various websites repeating the same old IAU definition along with the caveat
that Pluto is not a planet because “there is a third requirement of clearing
its orbit that Pluto does not meet.”
A
certain astronomer who believes he “killed” Pluto, and his followers, are
giving interviews and talks emphasizing that although this little world is
fascinating, it is still “dead” as a planet.
Nowhere
less than at the flyby celebration itself, a few media people likely acting for
this particular astronomer spent hours on Twitter tweeting about how Pluto is
dead, even accusing those of us who advocate its planet status of trying to “ruin
the flyby.”
The only way someone could have “ruined the flyby” would have been for them to fling debris directly at the rapidly flying spacecraft!
A
writer for the Planetary Society posted an image with the Society’s logo of the
“Non-planets visited by a spacecraft” that prominently featured Pluto—directly from
the mission headquarters on the very day of the flyby.
What
is going on here? To me, it seems obvious. Supporters of Pluto’s demotion keep
repeating their positions online because they know the flyby data will reveal just
how much of a planet Pluto is.
The “I
killed Pluto” astronomer claims that advocates of a geophysical planet
definition have simply “gotten louder, that no one has changed their minds on
the issue.” Yet the reality is just the opposite—opponents of Pluto’s planet
status are the ones who have gotten louder because the data is not working in
their favor.
NASA
Administrator Charles Bolden openly said he considers Pluto a planet.
Dr.
Daniel Brown, a British astronomer at Nottingham Trent University, said of
Pluto, on the day of the flyby, “Maybe we need to reconsider its status again.”
A
third requirement of orbit clearing? That constitutes circular reasoning, much
like arguments that claim the Earth is 6,000 years old because the Bible says
so. Just because an individual or group or book says something does not make
that thing true. This type of argument is called “appeal to authority” and is
known as a logical fallacy.
Some
people approached the flyby by setting a false dichotomy, arguing that focus on
Pluto’s status somehow detracts from focus on the science New Horizons is
doing.
To
me, that is a false claim. It is the science that tells us what an object is,
what processes it has undergone, and what it is experiencing now. The science
is what informs the status.
As
Alan Stern says, “It is very difficult to look at an object with this complexity
and NOT call it a planet.”
How
much sense does the IAU definition make when its defenders, such as Victor
Baker of the University of Arizona, make statements such as, "The
classification of Pluto as a dwarf planet is really not based on criteria
affected by the new images. The issue is that there are other planetary objects
in the far outer system that are very similar to Pluto in size and general
character."
In
other words, the actual processes on Pluto’s surface and the features that
reflect those processes have nothing to do with its classification. The only
thing that matters is an inexplicable need to keep the number of solar system
planets small. How far removed is this from, “I’ve made up my mind; don’t
confuse me with the facts?”
Between
now and the end of 2016, New Horizons will be the gift that keeps on giving—more
data, more pictures, more understanding of this fascinating binary planet
system. Those who refuse to adjust their perceptions based on new data are
nothing less than untrue to the scientific method.
Nine
years after a really bad decision was made, it is abundantly clear that that
decision was premature and just plain wrong.
Some
say, who cares; Pluto is what it is regardless of what we call it. But clearly,
many people DO care. Definitions matter because they are the way we make sense
of the world around us.
There
is no better time than now, as we await arrival of the other 95 percent of data
on the Pluto system, to affirm its planet status. As planetary scientist Phil
Metzger notes, “…classifying things in nature is an important part of the
progress of science, and therefore I believe it cannot ever be settled by a
vote. Trying to enforce an opinion through voting is unacceptable to the
scientific community.
However,
the IAU needed to decide on the bookkeeping method it would use for keeping
track of planets, and it had to decide something, so its members took a vote.
That should have never been represented as settling Pluto's planet status. But
mistakes happen all the time in science. We keep learning and we correct our
mistakes. In this case, the bad definition of a planet will be corrected, I
have no doubt.
…We
are free to call it a planet right now. The planetary science community has
never stopped calling bodies like Pluto ‘planets.’
So
start calling Pluto a planet right now. Add to the consensus, because that's
how science makes progress, by one person at a time being convinced of the
truth and adopting it. Science is not decided by votes and you are not required
to submit to nonsense.”
Make
your voice heard! Sign the petition at https://www.change.org/p/international-astronomical-union-declare-pluto-a-planet-plutoflyby
. It doesn’t matter that the Honolulu General Assembly is over. There will be
other General Assemblies, and there are other organizations that can address
this besides the IAU.
Notably,
this petition has 5,534 signatures—in contrast to 333 who voted that dwarf
planets are not planets (to their credit, 91 voted that dwarf planets should be a subclass of planets).
And
make sure to voice your opinion in the Pluto Safari poll at http://app.plutosafari.com/poll.html
. So far, out of 10,013 votes, 73 percent favor Pluto being classed as a
planet. Organizers of the poll note some even changed their minds from “no” to “yes”
during and after the flyby.
It’s
not over for Pluto. It’s just beginning.
https://vimeo.com/136223988
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