FACT #29
Pluto (minor planet designation: 134340 Pluto) is a dwarf
planet in the Kuiper belt, a ring of bodies beyond Neptune. It was the first
Kuiper belt object to be discovered and is the largest known plutoid (or ice
dwarf).
Pluto was discovered by Clyde Tombaugh in 1930 as the ninth
planet from the Sun. After 1992, its status as a planet was questioned
following the discovery of several objects of similar size in the Kuiper belt.
In 2005, Eris, a dwarf planet in the scattered disc which is 27% more massive
than Pluto, was discovered. This led the International Astronomical Union (IAU)
to define the term "planet" formally in 2006, during their 26th
General Assembly. That definition excluded Pluto and reclassified it as a dwarf
planet.
It is the ninth-largest and tenth-most-massive known object
directly orbiting the Sun. It is the largest known trans-Neptunian object by
volume but is less massive than Eris. Like other Kuiper belt objects, Pluto is
primarily made of ice and rock and is relatively small—about one-sixth the mass
of the Moon and one-third its volume. It has a moderately eccentric and
inclined orbit during which it ranges from 30 to 49 astronomical units or AU
(4.4–7.4 billion km) from the Sun. This means that Pluto periodically comes
closer to the Sun than Neptune, but a stable orbital resonance with Neptune
prevents them from colliding. Light from the Sun takes about 5.5 hours to reach
Pluto at its average distance (39.5 AU).
Pluto has five known moons: Charon (the largest, with a
diameter just over half that of Pluto), Styx, Nix, Kerberos, and Hydra. Pluto
and Charon are sometimes considered a binary system because the barycenter of
their orbits does not lie within either body.
The New Horizons spacecraft performed a flyby of Pluto on
July 14, 2015, becoming the first ever spacecraft to do so. During its brief
flyby, New Horizons made detailed measurements and observations of Pluto and
its moons. In September 2016, astronomers announced that the reddish-brown cap of
the north pole of Charon is composed of tholins, organic macromolecules that
may be ingredients for the emergence of life, and produced from methane,
nitrogen and other gases released from the atmosphere of Pluto and transferred
about 19,000 km (12,000 mi) to the orbiting moon.
The name Pluto, after the
god of the underworld, was proposed by Venetia Burney (1918–2009), an
eleven-year-old schoolgirl in Oxford, England, who was interested in classical
mythology. She suggested it in a conversation with her grandfather Falconer
Madan, a former librarian at the University of Oxford's Bodleian Library, who
passed the name to astronomy professor Herbert Hall Turner, who cabled it to
colleagues in the United States.
FACT #29
Reviewed by Admin
on
September 22, 2019
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