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''For other uses of the name, see [[Pluto (disambiguation)]].''
{{dambigbox|Pluto (dwarf planet)|Pluto}}


From its discovery in 1930 by American astronomer Clyde Tombaugh until 2006, '''Pluto''' was considered equal to the eight other [[planet]]s of the [[solar system]] - the furthest one from the [[sun]], taking 248 [[Earth]] years to complete one [[orbit]]. Like most other worlds in the region, it hosts [[natural satellite|moons]] - [[Charon]] was identified in 1978, with [[Nix]] and [[Hydra]] discovered in 2005. However, [[astronomy|astronomers]] came to realise that Pluto was actually the largest body of a much bigger collection at the fringes of the solar system - rocky, icy objects remaining from its formation, that together make up the [[Kuiper belt]]. Therefore, in 2006 Pluto's status was reassigned by the [[International Astronomical Union]] to '[[dwarf planet]]' - something with enough [[mass]] to become [[sphere|spherical]], but which has not through its own [[gravity]] 'cleared the neighbourhood' of other objects around it.<ref>[http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/profile.cfm?Object=Pluto Pluto] Solar System Exploration; Planets. NASA</ref>
{{Image|Pluto's two hemispheres Hubble Space Telescope.jpg|right|350px|Pluto's opposite hemispheres (north is up). The large lower images are processed versions made from a compilation of Hubble photos. The smaller images are raw images, each pixel representing about 150 km across. Variations in brightness may be due to topographic features and/or surface composition, frost layers, and interactions with Pluto's nitrogen-methane atmosphere. NASA photo credit (HST, STScI-PR96-09a)}}


Pluto has a highly elliptical orbit that is outside the plane of the other eight planets in an orbit of 3.282 x 10E10 km <ref>which is about 35.505 that of Earth</ref> and an orbital velocity of 4,749.0 m/s.<ref>about 0.425 that of Earth</ref> Its nearest approach to the sun brings it closer than the planet Neptune.Its average distrance from the sun of 5,906,380,000 km with a perihelion of 4.43682 x 10E9 km (29.658 A.U. at its nearest approach) and an aphelion of 7.37593 x 10E9 km (49.305 A.U. at the time it is furthest from the sun).
From its discovery in 1930 by American [[astronomy|astronomer]] [[Clyde Tombaugh]] until 2006, '''Pluto''' was considered equal to the eight other [[planet]]s of the [[solar system]] - the furthest one from the [[Sun]], taking 248.1 [[Earth]] years to complete one (admittedly odd) [[orbit]]. Like many other worlds in the region, it hosts [[natural satellite|moons]]: [[Charon]] was identified in 1978, with [[Nix]] and [[Hydra (moon)|Hydra]] discovered in 2005. However, astronomers eventually concluded that Pluto was actually the largest body of a much bigger collection at the fringes of the solar system - rocky, icy objects remaining from its formation, that together make up the [[Kuiper belt]]. Therefore, in 2006 Pluto's status was reassigned by the [[International Astronomical Union]] to '[[dwarf planet]]' - something with enough [[mass]] to become [[sphere|spherical]], but which has not through its own [[gravity]] 'cleared the neighbourhood' of other objects around it.<ref>''NASA'': '[http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/profile.cfm?Object=Pluto Solar System Exploration - Planets - Pluto]'.</ref>


It has an equatorial circumfrence of 7,232 km, a volume of 6.390 X10E9 km3, and a calculated mass of 13 X 10E21 kg. With its significantly lower mass its gravitational force with an escape velocity of 1,270 m/s (2,840 mph) is much lower than that of earth which has an escape velocity of 11.18 m/s (25,022 mph). Pluto's surface gravity is only about 8% that of Earth<ref>Equatorial surfacne gravity is 0.81 m/s2 and Earth is a little less than 10 m/s2</ref>. If you weighed 100 kilograms on Earth you would only weigh 8 kilgrams on Pluto.
==Orbit and size==
Pluto has a highly elliptical orbit that is outside the plane of the eight planets: its orbit is 3.282 × 10<sup>10</sup> kilometres,<ref>This is about 35.505 that of Earth.</ref> with an orbital velocity of 4,749.0 m/s.<ref>Pluto's orbital velocity is about 0.425 that of Earth.</ref> See [[Benchmark_quantities#Speed|Benchmark quantities]] to some comparisons to that velocity.  


Pluto's day (sideral rotation period) is about 6.387 Earth days or 153.3 hours. However, its rotational direction is retrograde, the opposite that of earth.
Pluto's nearest approach to the Sun brings it closer than the planet [[Neptune]]. Its average distance from the Sun is 5.9038 × 10<sup>9</sup> kilometers (39.433 [[astronomical unit]]s (AU)), with a perihelion of 4.43682 × 10<sup>9</sup> km (29.658 AU at its nearest approach to the Sun) and an aphelion of 7.37593 × 10<sup>9</sup> km (49.305 AU when it is furthest from the Sun).


<ref>[http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/profile.cfm?Object=Pluto&Display=Facts&System=Metric Pluto: Facts & Figures] NASA</ref>
It has an equatorial circumference of 7,232 km, a volume of 6.390 × 10<sup>9</sup> km<sup>3</sup>, and a calculated mass of 1.27 × 10<sup>22</sup> kg. With its significantly lower mass, its gravitational force with an escape velocity of 1,270 m/s (2,840 mph) is much lower than that of Earth, which has an escape velocity of 11.18 m/s (25,022 mph). Pluto's surface gravity is only about 8% that of Earth.<ref>Equatorial surface gravity is 0.81 m/s2, while on Earth it is a perhaps less than 9.8 m/s<sup>2</sup></ref> If you weighed 100 kilograms on Earth, you would only weigh 8 kilograms on Pluto.


=Notes=
Pluto's day (sidereal rotation period) is about 6.387 Earth days or 153.3 hours. However, its rotational direction is retrograde, the opposite to that of Earth.
 
==Physical characteristics==
Pluto has an extremely thin [[atmosphere]] and its minimum surface temperature is about -233 to-223 °C.<ref>-387 to -369 °F, or  40 to 50° Kelvin.</ref><ref>''NASA'': '[http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/profile.cfm?Object=Pluto&Display=Facts&System=Metric Solar System Exploration - Planets - Pluto - Facts & Figures]'.</ref>
In the 1970s, spectroscopic observation from Earth revealed that the planet surface is covered with methane ice which exhibits a bright coloration. During an eclipse by its moon Charon, the frozen methane surface, with the exception of the polar caps, was observed changing to a dark red. Pluto has a small iron-nickel alloy and rock core encased in a very thick layer of ice.<ref>[http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/multimedia/display.cfm?IM_ID=264 Pluto] NASA</ref>
 
Pluto has three known moons, the relatively large Charon, discovered in 1978, and the much smaller Hydra and Nix, discovered in 2005.
{{Image|Charon and Pluto.gif|right|350px|Charon (smaller object) and Pluto.}}
===Charon===
Charon is not exactly a satellite because it and Pluto orbit a barycenter above Pluto's surface.  This makes them a binary system.
 
Charon has a diameter of about 1,186 km (737 miles), a little more than half of Pluto's.
 
Pluto and Charon’s gravity have them joined in a mutually synchronized orbit so that they are always facing each other on the same side.
 
Many of the moons in our own solar system, including our own, keep the same hemisphere facing the planet they orbit. But Pluto and Charon is the only case in which the planet always presents the same hemisphere to its moon. From a human perspective it would like the other appeared to hang in place and never cross the sky.
 
Charon is named after a figure in Greek mythology, the boatman who carried the souls of the dead to the underworld. In Roman mythology, the underworld was ruled by the god Pluto. The name was suggested by James Christy of the U.S. Naval Observatory after he found the moon in 1978.
 
In 1985, Pluto and Charon began eclipsing each other from Earth's point of view. This continued for five years. The sequences of eclipses made it possible to measure their diameter and mass as each passed in front of the other.<ref>[http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/profile.cfm?Object=Dwarf&Display=OverviewLong Dwarf Planets] NASA Solar System Exploration</ref>
 
===Physical characteristics===
Charon is apparently covered by water ice. Pluto, on the other hand is covered with frozen nitrogen, methane, and carbon dioxide. One possible explanation for the difference is that the materials that formed Charon were in fact dislodged from Pluto in a collision in a manner not unlike the formation of Earth’s Moon.
 
==Exploration==
 
After being launched in January 2006, NASA’s New Horizons
<ref>[https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/newhorizons/overview/index.html NASA's New Horizons mission]</ref>
space craft flew by Pluto, making its closest approach on July 14, 2015.
 
==Notes==
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*[[Charon]]
*[[Charon]]
*[[Nix]]
*[[Nix]]
*[[Hydra]]
*[[Hydra]][[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]]
 
==External links==

Latest revision as of 06:00, 5 October 2024

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This article is about Pluto (dwarf planet). For other uses of the term Pluto, please see Pluto (disambiguation).
Pluto's opposite hemispheres (north is up). The large lower images are processed versions made from a compilation of Hubble photos. The smaller images are raw images, each pixel representing about 150 km across. Variations in brightness may be due to topographic features and/or surface composition, frost layers, and interactions with Pluto's nitrogen-methane atmosphere. NASA photo credit (HST, STScI-PR96-09a)

From its discovery in 1930 by American astronomer Clyde Tombaugh until 2006, Pluto was considered equal to the eight other planets of the solar system - the furthest one from the Sun, taking 248.1 Earth years to complete one (admittedly odd) orbit. Like many other worlds in the region, it hosts moons: Charon was identified in 1978, with Nix and Hydra discovered in 2005. However, astronomers eventually concluded that Pluto was actually the largest body of a much bigger collection at the fringes of the solar system - rocky, icy objects remaining from its formation, that together make up the Kuiper belt. Therefore, in 2006 Pluto's status was reassigned by the International Astronomical Union to 'dwarf planet' - something with enough mass to become spherical, but which has not through its own gravity 'cleared the neighbourhood' of other objects around it.[1]

Orbit and size

Pluto has a highly elliptical orbit that is outside the plane of the eight planets: its orbit is 3.282 × 1010 kilometres,[2] with an orbital velocity of 4,749.0 m/s.[3] See Benchmark quantities to some comparisons to that velocity.

Pluto's nearest approach to the Sun brings it closer than the planet Neptune. Its average distance from the Sun is 5.9038 × 109 kilometers (39.433 astronomical units (AU)), with a perihelion of 4.43682 × 109 km (29.658 AU at its nearest approach to the Sun) and an aphelion of 7.37593 × 109 km (49.305 AU when it is furthest from the Sun).

It has an equatorial circumference of 7,232 km, a volume of 6.390 × 109 km3, and a calculated mass of 1.27 × 1022 kg. With its significantly lower mass, its gravitational force with an escape velocity of 1,270 m/s (2,840 mph) is much lower than that of Earth, which has an escape velocity of 11.18 m/s (25,022 mph). Pluto's surface gravity is only about 8% that of Earth.[4] If you weighed 100 kilograms on Earth, you would only weigh 8 kilograms on Pluto.

Pluto's day (sidereal rotation period) is about 6.387 Earth days or 153.3 hours. However, its rotational direction is retrograde, the opposite to that of Earth.

Physical characteristics

Pluto has an extremely thin atmosphere and its minimum surface temperature is about -233 to-223 °C.[5][6] In the 1970s, spectroscopic observation from Earth revealed that the planet surface is covered with methane ice which exhibits a bright coloration. During an eclipse by its moon Charon, the frozen methane surface, with the exception of the polar caps, was observed changing to a dark red. Pluto has a small iron-nickel alloy and rock core encased in a very thick layer of ice.[7]

Pluto has three known moons, the relatively large Charon, discovered in 1978, and the much smaller Hydra and Nix, discovered in 2005.

Charon (smaller object) and Pluto.

Charon

Charon is not exactly a satellite because it and Pluto orbit a barycenter above Pluto's surface. This makes them a binary system.

Charon has a diameter of about 1,186 km (737 miles), a little more than half of Pluto's.

Pluto and Charon’s gravity have them joined in a mutually synchronized orbit so that they are always facing each other on the same side.

Many of the moons in our own solar system, including our own, keep the same hemisphere facing the planet they orbit. But Pluto and Charon is the only case in which the planet always presents the same hemisphere to its moon. From a human perspective it would like the other appeared to hang in place and never cross the sky.

Charon is named after a figure in Greek mythology, the boatman who carried the souls of the dead to the underworld. In Roman mythology, the underworld was ruled by the god Pluto. The name was suggested by James Christy of the U.S. Naval Observatory after he found the moon in 1978.

In 1985, Pluto and Charon began eclipsing each other from Earth's point of view. This continued for five years. The sequences of eclipses made it possible to measure their diameter and mass as each passed in front of the other.[8]

Physical characteristics

Charon is apparently covered by water ice. Pluto, on the other hand is covered with frozen nitrogen, methane, and carbon dioxide. One possible explanation for the difference is that the materials that formed Charon were in fact dislodged from Pluto in a collision in a manner not unlike the formation of Earth’s Moon.

Exploration

After being launched in January 2006, NASA’s New Horizons [9] space craft flew by Pluto, making its closest approach on July 14, 2015.

Notes

  1. NASA: 'Solar System Exploration - Planets - Pluto'.
  2. This is about 35.505 that of Earth.
  3. Pluto's orbital velocity is about 0.425 that of Earth.
  4. Equatorial surface gravity is 0.81 m/s2, while on Earth it is a perhaps less than 9.8 m/s2
  5. -387 to -369 °F, or 40 to 50° Kelvin.
  6. NASA: 'Solar System Exploration - Planets - Pluto - Facts & Figures'.
  7. Pluto NASA
  8. Dwarf Planets NASA Solar System Exploration
  9. NASA's New Horizons mission

See also