Why does Pluto persist?

For a not-so-recent birthday, I got given a lovely T-shirt with very cutesy renditions of all the planets on it; with each one sporting a friendly face and a colourful label. It’s the perfect blend of astronomer & dad nerd. But one thing about it that I almost totally missed when I first saw it, was the sneaky inclusion of Pluto, hanging out with the rest of the gang; partying like it’s 1999.

The shirt is a recent design —newer than 18 years, at the very least— and I would argue Pluto’s planetary declassification is probably one of more better-known bits of astronomy trivia in the mainstream. So really, whoever had included it had to be aware of Pluto’s non-planetary status and did it deliberately. The question is, why?

Pluto is not a planet, but don’t take it personally. (image: NASA/Johns Hopkins University APL)

It turns out that quite a lot of people are remarkably loyal to this ball of ice and rock 1/6th the mass of the moon, hanging out on average about 40 times further from the sun than we are. How loyal, you say? Well, aside from a (admittedly not completely serious) pledge by the state of California that Pluto will always be treated as a planet, there seems to be a general, grassroots sentiment that Pluto was short-changed by a stuffy scientific establishment, out-of-touch with the people. “Make your mind up, scientists!” & “I was taught there was a planet there, so that’s what I’m going to keep believing.” And so on.

For what it’s worth, I don’t think the fanaticism is about the rock. This phenomenon seems to have a whole lot more to do with distrust of science, anti-authority, conspiracy theory and generational solidarity.

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Interesting Times

Lately that elusive substance that is Free Time has seemingly evaporated, as a multitude of pursuits collide. In particular, my quest for a Private Pilots Licence and my preparations for half a year in Australia have me rushed off my feet. But I made a resolution that my entries won’t turn into lamenting for lack of free time, so enough about that.

I recently compiled an actual paper checklist for something that has existed for a long time only in my head: the Checklist for the Future. On it are a number of key innovations and milestones, such as Antigravity and Civilian (Orbital) Spaceflight. The idea being that once all the boxes are ticked, we will be in the future. Obviously. Exciting stuff!

Yesterday I came across a fascinating documentary about chaos, spontaneous pattern formation and the Mandelbrot Set. I recommend checking it out, particularly if the ideas of order emerging from nothing and predictable systems having unpredictable outcomes interests you at all. I find it encouraging that it still doesn’t invalidate the physics behind my Chonoportology writings, too (that does, in essence, try to answer the question of what actually determines the A or B path of any given event).

In other news, THIS: