- Planemo
A planemo is a celestial object with mass greater than that of an irregularly shaped asteroid, yet smaller than a nuclear reactive
brown dwarf orstar . This "bizarre class of planet-sized objects has no suns at all, and instead floats untethered through space." [ [http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19588333/?pg=4#Space_10ExtraSolarPlanets_070626 Extra Solar Planets msn.com] ] [ [http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/060803_planemo_twins.html www.space.com] ] The term covers all bodies within this size range, although most planemos thatorbit stars are more regularly referred to with the more specific term,planet (see alsodwarf planet ).Fact|date=June 2008 Planemo is a contraction of "plane"tary "m"ass "o"bject. The term has yet to achieve common usage in the scientific community: as of October 2007, it appeared in only four papers in the [http://arxiv.org/archive/astro-ph astro-ph archive] .Origin of the term
The description "planemo"cite web |url= http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/13149429/ |title= Mini-solar systems spark scientific debate |author= Robert Roy Britt |work=
MSNBC |date=6 June 2006 |quote= The scientists involved in the new research are calling the objects "planemos," short for planetary-mass objects that were born in the manner of stars and do not orbit normal stars. (Image by space artistJon Lomberg .) ] was first proposed in 2003 to theInternational Astronomical Union (IAU) byGibor Basri , Professor of Astronomy at theUniversity of California, Berkeley , to help clarify the nomenclature ofcelestial bodies . At the time, the world of astronomy was undergoing a debate (concluded only in 2006) as to what does, and what does not, constitute a planet. Under Basri's definition a planemo would be "an object [rounded by self-gravity] that does not achieve core fusion during its lifetime", regardless of its orbit. It is deliberately contrasted with Basri's suggesteddefinition of planet , ("a planemo that orbits a fusor") and was thus intended as a solution to the debate.Within our solar system
If applied to our own solar system the list of planemos would include some or all of the following:Fact|date=June 2008
The list appears in order of increasing average distance from the Sun, with planets and dwarf planets in bold. The numbered planemos could possibly be counted as
planet s if Basri's definition was used, with the bold ones definitely counting. However many more objects in the distant solar system could be found that would qualify under the definition, with some astronomers predicting hundreds to be discovered.As "round" is a relative term that would need to be precisely quantified, an eventual list could vary from this. For example, mp|2003 EL|61 is more elliptical than spherical. Basri notes 'roundness' requires "enough
mass to allow their self-gravity to overcome any material forces that might produceasymmetric shapes" and that "technically roundness means conformity to theequipotential surface ." The IAU's view means an object would qualify if it "has sufficient mass for its self-gravity to overcome rigid body forces so that it assumes a hydrostatic equilibrium (nearly round) shape."Recent discoveries
Cha 110913-77344 was discovered by the
Spitzer Space Telescope . It is 8 times more massive than Jupiter, and an estimated 2 million years old. It is encircled by a disk of dust. It is 500 light-years away from Earth.The first Planemos discovered outside our Solar System were those orbiting
PSR 1257+12 , discovered in 1992 byAleksander Wolszczan andDale Frail [ [http://www.astro.psu.edu/users/alex/pulsar_planets.htm Pulsar Planets ] ] ; aspulsar planets , they surprised many astronomers who expected to find planets only aroundmain sequence stars.References
External links
*Gibor Basri,
Michael E. Brown , "Planetesimals to Brown Dwarfs: What is a Planet?", 2006 [http://www.arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0608417 Preprint]
* [http://astron.berkeley.edu/%7Ebasri/defineplanet/Mercury.htm Defining "Planet" by Gibor Basri]
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/5241774.stm BBC News: Strange 'twin' new worlds found ]
* [http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/06/060605190412.htm ScienceDaily: New Study Suggests 'Planemos' May Spawn Planets And Moons] June 6, 2006 (University of Toronto )ee also
*
fusor (astronomy)
*mesoplanet
*protoplanet
*planetesimal
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