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Do you have a pet planetary classification system? If so, I offer
this thread as a place to post it. Here's mine: A planet is a compact, natural, physical object made of ordinary matter in orbit about a more massive object or adrift in space. The eight planetary classes are as follows: Giant Class: (= 500 Earth masses & non-fusor) Jupiter Class: (= 50 Earth masses 500 Earth masses) Neptune Class: (= 5 Earth masses 50 Earth masses) Earth Class: (= 0.5 Earth masses 5 Earth masses) Mars Class: (= .05 Earth masses 0.5 Earth masses) ------- Class: (= .005 Earth masses .05 Earth masses) Pluto Class: (= .0005 Earth masses .005 Earth masses) Asteroid Class: ( .0005 Earth masses) The class between the Pluto and Mars classes can be named for any object found in that class -- or it could be called the "Vulcan Class" or anything else the IAU sees fit to call it. The above system is simple and keeps our solar system reasonably close to its traditionally accepted form. It allows flexibility in describing any planetary system. For example, one could refer to all sun orbiting bodies above the Pluto Class. One could refer to all Asteroid Class planets simply as "asteroids" or "minor planets" etc. Willie R. Meghar |
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you are ahead of your time and definately ahead of the IAU and Earth
politics. "Willie R. Meghar" wrote: Do you have a pet planetary classification system? If so, I offer this thread as a place to post it. Here's mine: A planet is a compact, natural, physical object made of ordinary matter in orbit about a more massive object or adrift in space. The eight planetary classes are as follows: Giant Class: (= 500 Earth masses & non-fusor) Jupiter Class: (= 50 Earth masses 500 Earth masses) Neptune Class: (= 5 Earth masses 50 Earth masses) Earth Class: (= 0.5 Earth masses 5 Earth masses) Mars Class: (= .05 Earth masses 0.5 Earth masses) ------- Class: (= .005 Earth masses .05 Earth masses) Pluto Class: (= .0005 Earth masses .005 Earth masses) Asteroid Class: ( .0005 Earth masses) The class between the Pluto and Mars classes can be named for any object found in that class -- or it could be called the "Vulcan Class" or anything else the IAU sees fit to call it. The above system is simple and keeps our solar system reasonably close to its traditionally accepted form. It allows flexibility in describing any planetary system. For example, one could refer to all sun orbiting bodies above the Pluto Class. One could refer to all Asteroid Class planets simply as "asteroids" or "minor planets" etc. Willie R. Meghar |
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On Fri, 18 Aug 2006 16:06:55 -0600, Willie R. Meghar
wrote: Do you have a pet planetary classification system? If so, I offer this thread as a place to post it. I like your concept. I'd revise it, however. Formally, a planet is [Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, Pluto]. Informally a planet could also be any generally spherical, non-fusing body orbiting a star. This term would never be used in a scientific publication or situation where rigor was required (unless referring to the nine planets listed above). A "planetary body" (or invent your own name) is a non-fusing body orbiting a star . There are many classifications of planetary bodies. I wouldn't generally classify by mass, as you have, but by composition and origin. But the classes could be arbitrarily complex and extendible to deal with new types of bodies, or new understanding of bodies. _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com |
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Chris L Peterson wrote:
I like your concept. I'd revise it, however. Formally, a planet is [Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, Pluto]. Informally a planet could also be any generally spherical, non-fusing body orbiting a star. This term would never be used in a scientific publication or situation where rigor was required (unless referring to the nine planets listed above). A "planetary body" (or invent your own name) is a non-fusing body orbiting a star . There are many classifications of planetary bodies. I wouldn't generally classify by mass, as you have, but by composition and origin. But the classes could be arbitrarily complex and extendible to deal with new types of bodies, or new understanding of bodies. Mass tends to be one of the first physical characteristics known about newly discovered planetary bodies, whether those bodies be in our own solar system or in orbit around stars other than our sun. IMO any new classification system ought to be applicable not only to known planetary bodies within our own solar system, but also to the growing number of extra-solar discoveries. Willie R. Meghar |
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Willie R. Meghar wrote:
Do you have a pet planetary classification system? If so, I offer this thread as a place to post it. Here's mine: A planet is a compact, natural, physical object made of ordinary matter in orbit about a more massive object or adrift in space. The eight planetary classes are as follows: Giant Class: (= 500 Earth masses & non-fusor) Jupiter Class: (= 50 Earth masses 500 Earth masses) Neptune Class: (= 5 Earth masses 50 Earth masses) Earth Class: (= 0.5 Earth masses 5 Earth masses) Mars Class: (= .05 Earth masses 0.5 Earth masses) ------- Class: (= .005 Earth masses .05 Earth masses) Pluto Class: (= .0005 Earth masses .005 Earth masses) Asteroid Class: ( .0005 Earth masses) The class between the Pluto and Mars classes can be named for any object found in that class -- or it could be called the "Vulcan Class" or anything else the IAU sees fit to call it. The above system is simple and keeps our solar system reasonably close to its traditionally accepted form. It allows flexibility in describing any planetary system. For example, one could refer to all sun orbiting bodies above the Pluto Class. One could refer to all Asteroid Class planets simply as "asteroids" or "minor planets" etc. Or one could call Ceres an asteroid planet : http://cosmic.lifeform.org/?p=115 That's still 10 or more planets. http://cosmic.lifeform.org |
#6
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Willie R. Meghar wrote:
Do you have a pet planetary classification system? If so, I offer this thread as a place to post it. Here's mine: A planet is a compact, natural, physical object made of ordinary matter in orbit about a more massive object or adrift in space. The eight planetary classes are as follows: Giant Class: (= 500 Earth masses & non-fusor) Jupiter Class: (= 50 Earth masses 500 Earth masses) Neptune Class: (= 5 Earth masses 50 Earth masses) Earth Class: (= 0.5 Earth masses 5 Earth masses) Mars Class: (= .05 Earth masses 0.5 Earth masses) *Lunar* Class: (= .005 Earth masses .05 Earth masses) Pluto Class: (= .0005 Earth masses .005 Earth masses) Asteroid Class: ( .0005 Earth masses) Since we've agreed the scale is arbitrary, I suppose this is as good as any. The what's his name scale - the Meghar scale of planetary mass classification, spanning eight full decimal orders of magnitude of hydrostatic equilibrium. Fortuitously (our solar system is so special) we have 10 planets at least, two of which are representative of 'belts', the asteroid belt and the Kuiper Belt, or the trans-Neptunian planets. Remarkably, we have no lunar class planets, nor any real giants. I think the idea is to get past the old nine planets thing. http://cosmic.lifeform.org The class between the Pluto and Mars classes can be named for any object found in that class -- or it could be called the "Vulcan Class" or anything else the IAU sees fit to call it. The above system is simple and keeps our solar system reasonably close to its traditionally accepted form. It allows flexibility in describing any planetary system. For example, one could refer to all sun orbiting bodies above the Pluto Class. One could refer to all Asteroid Class planets simply as "asteroids" or "minor planets" etc. Willie R. Meghar |
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