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Hello, everyone, and it is my great pleasure to share a first version
of an article entitled "Planetary Taxonomy: An inclusive and multidimensional approach" addressing both the Solar System and extrasolar planets. http://www.bestII.com/~mschulter/inclusive_planet_def100.txt For those who might want a quick summary of the basic approach, a bit different as far as I know than anything proposed in the Prague discussions leading up to the IAU resolutions of 24 August 2006, here's an abstract, with the full text at the above URL. Of course, I'd also be glad to post the full text here, if this is consistent with the customs of the newsgroup; but I know that often posting a URL for longer texts can be more efficient and save bandwidth. * * * ABSTRACT: This article presents an inclusive approach to the classification of both solar and extrasolar planets. A planetary mass object or planemo is any celestial body larger than a meteoroid and less massive than a fusor (i.e. a main sequence star or brown dwarf). Any planemo is classified as macro/micro depending on whether it has sufficient mass for self-gravitationally constrained near-sphericity or hydrostatic equilibrium. Stellar system planets (planemos orbiting fusors) are additionally classified as major/minor based on a test of dynamical dominance or "clearing the neighborhood." The macro/micro and major/minor dimensions are taken as orthogonal. Unbound or free-floating planemos may optionally also be called "free-floating planets," and subtyped according to their histories (if ascertainable) as "sub-brown dwarfs" formed by primary core accretion or "ejected planets" formed in protoplanetary disks. Satellites, non-fusors orbiting other non-fusors, may be classified in a scheme combining a macro/micro dimension (as with other planemos) and a major/minor dimension focusing on dynamical dominance within the satellite's orbital region of the planet-satellite system (e.g. a moonlet in a ring system situated in a gap or embedded within a ring). Binary/multiple planet systems as defined by a barycenter test (e.g. Pluto-Charon) and "quasi-binary" planet-satellite systems with comparably sized members (e.g. Earth-Moon) might usefully be placed on a continuum of "companion planemo relations" which considers both barycenter location and mass ratios. The wealth of microplanet- microsatellite or binary/multiple microplanet systems in our own Solar System (e.g. the asteroid belt) should help to enrich our understanding of this continuum of possibilities for extrasolar planetary systems. Most appreciatively, Margo Schulter |
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