Moderator: selden
Doesn't the original definition stipulate hydrostatic equilibrium, rather than roundness?ajtribick wrote:A dwarf planet eh? Cue lots of fighting about what is "round" in 3... 2... 1...
Because Chris is the boss:ajtribick wrote:Out of interest, why is it that of the dwarf planets, Pluto gets special privilege in having the non-numbered designation coming first in the list of identifiers?
That comes from our discussion in the "Multiple names for solar system objects" thread, the top post here.chris wrote:As for name priority, I'm partial to standardizing on the compound "number name" form as the primary name for minor planets (with an exception for Pluto.)
granthutchison wrote:Because Chris is the boss:ajtribick wrote:Out of interest, why is it that of the dwarf planets, Pluto gets special privilege in having the non-numbered designation coming first in the list of identifiers?That comes from our discussion in the "Multiple names for solar system objects" thread, the top post here.chris wrote:As for name priority, I'm partial to standardizing on the compound "number name" form as the primary name for minor planets (with an exception for Pluto.)
Grant
ajtribick wrote:A dwarf planet eh? Cue lots of fighting about what is "round" in 3... 2... 1...
Out of interest, why is it that of the dwarf planets, Pluto gets special privilege in having the non-numbered designation coming first in the list of identifiers?
chris wrote:Out of interest, why is it that of the dwarf planets, Pluto gets special privilege in having the non-numbered designation coming first in the list of identifiers?
Simply because people are much more familiar with "Pluto" than "134340 Pluto", and there's no practical impact from this small inconsistency.
--Chris
ajtribick wrote:chris wrote:Out of interest, why is it that of the dwarf planets, Pluto gets special privilege in having the non-numbered designation coming first in the list of identifiers?
Simply because people are much more familiar with "Pluto" than "134340 Pluto", and there's no practical impact from this small inconsistency.
--Chris
Then again, the familiarity issue could be raised for objects like Ceres: most people are probably more familiar with "Ceres" than "1 Ceres", or "Eris" than "136199 Eris". Similarly most people are probably more familiar with "2003 EL61" than "Haumea" or "136108 Haumea".
ajtribick wrote:So rather than encouraging the average user to find out about how minor planet numbering works etc, we let them keep their favourite planet unblemished so they can stay nice and comfortably in the 20th century?
chris wrote:ajtribick wrote:So rather than encouraging the average user to find out about how minor planet numbering works etc, we let them keep their favourite planet unblemished so they can stay nice and comfortably in the 20th century?
No.
I'm saying that Pluto should be easy to locate for the average user, and that usability outweighs the need for absolute consistency. As soon as a user selects Pluto, the name decorated with the minor planet number appears in the upper left corner. That ought to be enough incentive for the inquisitive user to go read up on minor planet numbers.
--Chris
ajtribick wrote:chris wrote:ajtribick wrote:So rather than encouraging the average user to find out about how minor planet numbering works etc, we let them keep their favourite planet unblemished so they can stay nice and comfortably in the 20th century?
No.
I'm saying that Pluto should be easy to locate for the average user, and that usability outweighs the need for absolute consistency. As soon as a user selects Pluto, the name decorated with the minor planet number appears in the upper left corner. That ought to be enough incentive for the inquisitive user to go read up on minor planet numbers.
--Chris
So when the user turns on dwarf planet orbits+labelling, it doesn't matter that they see a bunch of "gobbledygook" (as you put it) in front of all the other names, despite being used to seeing these objects referred to in the popular media without the numbers (same when asteroids get mentioned). They then wonder why Pluto doesn't have the "gobbledygook" and every other dwarf planet and asteroid does, and if they bring it up in the forums we just have to say that the reason is because Chris says so.
If familiarity for the "average user" is the major concern here, I think you make a very good case for making the non-numbered designation the primary designation in the case of all minor planets.
ajtribick wrote:No special treatment for Pluto! Down with Pluto!![]()
Cham wrote:I personally MUCH prefer to see the non-numbered names in the main window because the numbers are taking too much space and make things confusing. Having the numbered names displayed in the upper-left corner as a second name is much better, in my oinion. I've edited the data files so only the non-numbered names are displayed first. This way, it's more consistent with Pluto and other objects designation.
Return to Physics and Astronomy
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 5 guests