Fourth moon of Pluto discovered

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seamusTX
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Fourth moon of Pluto discovered

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Astronomers announced the discovery of a fourth moon of Pluto, viewed through photos from the Hubble telescope.

http://www.csmonitor.com/Science/2011/0 ... NASA-probe" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
http://www.space.com/11431-photos-pluto ... lanet.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

Tentatively called P4, it's basically a small frozen rock orbiting a slightly larger frozen rock. I don't know what this means in the grand scheme of things.

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Re: Fourth moon of Pluto discovered

Post by philip964 »

to me if something is orbiting it, it is a planet.

poor Pluto, so loved, yet so disrespected.

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Do not despair, your Pluto will regain its greatness some day
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seamusTX
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Re: Fourth moon of Pluto discovered

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Pluto.jpg
Pluto.jpg (6.89 KiB) Viewed 1806 times
Sorry. I couldn't help myself.

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Re: Fourth moon of Pluto discovered

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philip964 wrote:to me if something is orbiting it, it is a planet.
Well, the Earth orbits the Sun -- does that make the Sun a planet? :txflag:
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seamusTX
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Re: Fourth moon of Pluto discovered

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I don't know the point of arguing about what is or isn't a planet. There may well be a distant body in the Kuiper belt or Oort cloud that is larger than Pluto.

ISTR there is an asteroid that has a tiny satellite, but don't quote me on that.

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Re: Fourth moon of Pluto discovered

Post by snatchel »

Finally, a topic I can shed some light on. I am required to take a couple of physics classes, so I am currently taking a few astronomy classes! Unfortunately, our school has a planetarium, and the class is in the planetarium.... and the class is 2 hours long since it is currently summer session----so i sleep a lot. Between naps, I have gathered this about pluto:

It is a "dwarf planet"
It lost its place as a planet because it is so different from our other "traditional" planets.
It is composed of a bunch of frozen ice, helium, and other gasses.
It's tiny--even smaller than our moon.

I guess I dont have as much information as I thought.
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seamusTX
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Re: Fourth moon of Pluto discovered

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The earth's moon is big. Only couple or three moons of Jupiter and Saturn are larger (Ganymede and Titan, I think, but don't quote me).

The main problem with Pluto is that when they got a decent image of it, it turned out to look like an iceberg rather than a spherical planet.

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Re: Fourth moon of Pluto discovered

Post by snatchel »

You are correct, SeamusTx! Ganymede and Titan are the bigger moons.

We actually have a rover of some sort out and about space somewhere taking pictures of those far outer planets.
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Re: Fourth moon of Pluto discovered

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The two Voyager craft are still out there, still sending back photos.

viewtopic.php?f=83&t=40428" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

I think Galileo is still limping along also. Or did it crash into Jupiter? I forget.

P.S.: Intentionally crashed in 2003: http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/galileo/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

Hubble seems to be able to take better photos now when it can get a clear view of something.

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Re: Fourth moon of Pluto discovered

Post by Skiprr »

To put it in perspective, the newly discovered P4 would fit within the confines of Houston's 610 Loop. Even Houston doesn't fit inside the 610 Loop...
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Re: Fourth moon of Pluto discovered

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I just hope that none in NASA would come up with mission to said moon, costing 100s of millions of dollars that has 0 return on our investment.
NASA getting so expensive institution that I can't describe what a waste of money.

BTW, anyone knows what discoveries or advances in science or return on investment of the 200 billions dollars spent on the space station?
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Re: Fourth moon of Pluto discovered

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OK. I was wrong about a couple of things.

Pluto is a sphere. These are visible-light photos taken by Hubble years ago:
Image
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news ... -pictures/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archiv ... es/2010/06" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

There is a spacecraft named New Horizons that was launched in 2006 and is about halfway to Pluto now.

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Re: Fourth moon of Pluto discovered

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Beiruty wrote:I just hope that none in NASA would come up with mission to said moon, costing 100s of millions of dollars that has 0 return on our investment.
What's the point of knowing anything? You could spend your life like an animal looking only at the ground between your feet and thinking only of your next meal.

Probably the space station has not produced a return on investment. However, it is a first step to a manned space program going farther. Some day mankind has to get off this planet or die here as a species.

You could not live modern life without satellites for weather, GPS, communications, and surveillance. You may not personally have contact with them, but you use what they make possible.

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Re: Fourth moon of Pluto discovered

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seamusTX wrote:Image
Sorry. I couldn't help myself.

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Re: Fourth moon of Pluto discovered

Post by WildBill »

seamusTX wrote:
Beiruty wrote:I just hope that none in NASA would come up with mission to said moon, costing 100s of millions of dollars that has 0 return on our investment.
What's the point of knowing anything? You could spend your life like an animal looking only at the ground between your feet and thinking only of your next meal.

Probably the space station has not produced a return on investment. However, it is a first step to a manned space program going farther. Some day mankind has to get off this planet or die here as a species.

You could not live modern life without satellites for weather, GPS, communications, and surveillance. You may not personally have contact with them, but you use what they make possible.

- Jim
Not every expedition or adventure is an investment that is expected to return a monetary value. IMO, exploration and research for the sake of knowledge are worthy and noble causes.
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