A Note from the Author: On August 24, 2006, at the 26th General
Assembly of the International Astronomical Union (IAU) in Prague,
by a majority vote of only the 424 members present, the IAU (an
organization of over 10,000 members) passed a resolution defining
planet in such a way as to exclude Pluto and established a new
class of objects in the solar system to be called "dwarf planets,"
which was deliberately designed to include Pluto.
With the discovery of Eris (2003 UB313)--an outer solar system
object thought to be both slightly larger than Pluto and twice as
far from the Sun--astronomers have again been thrown into an
age-old debate about what is and what is not a planet. One of many
sizeable hunks of rock and ice in the Kuiper Belt, Eris has
resisted easy classification and inspired much controversy over the
definition of planethood. But, Pluto itself has been subject to
controversy since its discovery in 1930, and questions over its
status linger. Is it a planet? What exactly is a planet?
"Is Pluto a Planet?" tells the story of how the meaning of the
word "planet" has changed from antiquity to the present day, as new
objects in our solar system have been discovered. In lively,
thoroughly accessible prose, David Weintraub provides the
historical, philosophical, and astronomical background that allows
us to decide for ourselves whether Pluto is indeed a planet.
The number of possible planets has ranged widely over the
centuries, from five to seventeen. This book makes sense of it
all--from the ancient Greeks' observation that some stars wander
while others don't; to Copernicus, who made Earth a planet but
rejected the Sun and the Moon; to the discoveries of comets,
Uranus, Ceres, the asteroid belt, Neptune, Pluto, centaurs, the
Kuiper Belt and Eris, and extrasolar planets.
Weaving the history of our thinking about planets and cosmology
into a single, remarkable story, "Is Pluto a Planet?" is for all
those who seek a fuller understanding of the science surrounding
both Pluto and the provocative recent discoveries in our outer
solar system.
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