PLANET

[Gr.,=wanderer], a large nonluminous ball of rock or gas that orbits a star. The term, once limited to any of the nine solid, nonluminous bodies (major planets) that revolve around the sun, has been extended to include similar bodies discovered revolving around other stars. The term is sometimes used to include the asteroids (or minor planets) but excludes the other members of the solar system: comets and meteoroids (see meteor; see also planetary science and planetary system, as well as the table entitled Major Planets of the Solar System).

Classification of the Major Planets

The major planets are classified either as inferior, with an orbit between the sun and the orbit of Earth (Mercury and Venus), or as superior, with an orbit beyond that of Earth (Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto). On the basis of their physical properties the planets are further classified as terrestrial or Jovian. The terrestrial planets—Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars—resemble Earth in size, chemical composition, and density. Their periods of rotation range from about 24 hr for Mars to 249 days for Venus. The Jovian planets—Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune—are much larger in size and have thick, gaseous atmospheres and low densities. Their periods of rotation range from about 10 hr for Jupiter to 15 hr for Neptune. This rapid rotation results in polar flattening of 2% to 10%, giving the planets an elliptical appearance. Although Pluto is sometimes termed a terrestrial planet, it is a special case.

Recognition of the Planets

Identification of the Solar Planets

The ancient Greeks applied the term planet to the five major planets then known—Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn—as well as to the sun and moon; all these bodies were observed to move back and forth against the background of the apparently fixed stars and to shine with a steady light. In the Ptolemaic system the earth was thought to lie at rest in the center of the universe while the planets moved about it in a complicated scheme of circles. The heliocentric, or sun-centered, Copernican system, introduced in the 16th cent., viewed the planets, including the earth, as revolving about the sun; the moon was viewed as a natural satellite of the earth. At the start of the 17th cent. Johannes Kepler refined the Copernican model by showing that the orbits of the planets around the sun were elliptical rather than circular.

With the development of the telescope other planets became visible. Uranus, detected in 1781 by Sir William Herschel, was the first planet discovered in modern times. Neptune was discovered in 1846 as the result of a mathematical analysis of the irregularities in the motion of Uranus, and Pluto, whose existence was predicted from the perturbations of both Uranus and Neptune, was found in 1930. In addition to the major planets, the telescope has revealed thousands of minor planets, or asteroids, which orbit the sun in a bandlike cluster between Mars and Jupiter; the largest of these, Ceres, was also the first discovered (1801).

Discovery of the Extrasolar Planets

Although speculation concerning the existence of extrasolar planets and planetary systems dates back to antiquity, it was not until the last decade of the 20th cent. that astronomical tools and techniques made their detection possible. Because stars are so distant and bright and an extrasolar planet, no matter how large, is relatively small and dim, it cannot be seen or photographed directly. Its presence is usually inferred from a periodic wobble in the spectrum of a target star's frequencies. This wobble, produced by gravitational influences, causes tiny shifts in the star's frequencies that are caught by telescopes and analyzed to yield information on the body affecting the star. Another technique that proved fruitful in 1999 is the use of a telescope to record the dimming of light from a star when a planet's orbit carries it between the star and the earth.

Spurred on by the discovery of three bodies orbiting a pulsar by radio astronomers in 1992, the first extrasolar planet orbiting a sunlike star was detected in 1995. Located in the constellation Pegasus, about 40 light-years from earth, the planet—called 51 Pegasi—has about half the mass of Jupiter and is so close to the star that it has a surface temperature of about 1,000 degrees Celsius and completes its orbit in only four days. By the end of the decade, more than two dozen extrasolar planets were detected, including three orbiting the star Upsilon Andromedae—the first multiplanet extrasolar planetary system—that were discovered in 1999. Within four years the number of known extrasolar planets had surpassed 100, a number approached by the known planetary systems. Most of these are giant gas planets with masses ranging from one-half to five times that of Jupiter, the largest of the solar planets. Many have orbits that are highly elliptical rather than only slightly so, are closer to their star than the earth is to the sun, and have orbital periods ranging from three days to more than four years. In addition, the ages of the extrasolar planets differ from one another and from that of the solar planets; the oldest planet, discovered in the globular cluster M4 in 2003, is believed to have been formed 12.7 billion years ago, within a billion years of the origin of the universe and 8 billion years before the earth. Because these data are so different from that of the solar planets, planetary scientists are rethinking the accepted theories of planetary formation.

Bibliography

See P. Halpern, The Quest for Alien Planets: Exploring Worlds Outside the Solar System (1997); J. R. Gribbin and S. Goodwin, Empire of the Sun: Planets and Moons of the Solar System (1998).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...be left as a silicate-poor planet. The posterosion residue is...resonances. The eccentricity of a planets orbit causes the gravitational...orbital path around the star. A planet that is quite close to a star...opposite side as well. As the planet nears periastron, the force...
...147, 210 , 226 , 242 Planet X, 72 -75, 77 , 106 Planets atmospheres of, 776...152 new: see Extrasolar planets search for: see Planet search methods Platonic...154, 209 Quest for planets: see Planet search methods Rasio...
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Brilliant.... In Black Planet, Shields uses his gift for mediated...s dialogue on race. -Sport Black Planet is an important book-ne which bravely...Zane, Raleigla News dr Obseruer Black Planet is an extraordinary, unique, and...
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...offered by Lonely Planet up to and including 1981. Lonely Planets focus on places peripheral...probably happen. Lonely Planets sense of identity...traveller Lonely Planet marketed itself towards...practice, Lonely Planets intended readers...claimed that Lonely Planet travellers want...
...to be gas giant planets, similar to Jupiter...theory of gas giant planet formation is in...number of habitable planets that may orbit...another Earth-like planet outside our own...formation of habitable planets in the inner region of the planet-forming disk...
Planet of Slums. by Ron Kassimir Planet of Slums, Mike Davis (London: Verso, 2006), 256 pp., $24 cloth, $16.95 paper. Planet of Slums is relentless. Mike Davis, the prolific author and...
A Patchwork Planet by Nora Foster Stovel Anne Tyler A Patchwork Planet Toronto: Penguin Books, 1998. Pp. 288. $9.99...States in recent decades. Her latest novel, A Patchwork Planet (originally published by Viking), is true to the...
...one by one the other planet-to-book relationships...He had translated the planets into plots, and the...lens with regard to the planet in question, an intellectually...thorough discussion of the planets "influence" on the...balanced discussions of each planet and Chronicle advance...
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...now, we have no Planet B. None of the known planets around other stars...stages of star and planet formation are not...find life-bearing planets, they need to know...proposed Terrestrial Planet Finder project would study planets beyond our solar...
...the confines of the planets. This discovery...Is Pluto truly a planet?A growing number...which wed have nine planets,"says Hal Levison...By calling Pluto a planet, he says, astronomers...neatly ends in a ninth planet, rather than trailing...there are four giant planets, four terrestrial...
...the confines of the planets. This discovery...Is Pluto truly a planet? A growing number...which wed have nine planets," says Hal Levison...By calling Pluto a planet, he says, astronomers...neatly ends in a ninth planet, rather than trailing...there are four giant planets, four terrestrial...
Planet X The search for new planets in our solar system may...traditions of naming the planets after mythological characters, the seventh planet was named for Uranus...had to be yet another planet or planets in the solar system...
...all, isnt Pluto a planet? Maybe. First of...easily falls between planets and moons (as does...Xenas orbit: most planets have an orbit that...while the new planet is by far the most...which it becomes a planet? For that matter...between stars and planets is quite as neat...
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...offered up hundreds of planet candidates that await...these extrasolar planets, or exoplanets...gravitational tug of orbiting planets. Or they look for...evidence that a planet is transiting, or...atmosphere (if the planet has one). Astronomers...evidence of life in the planets air, such as significant...
Planet Payment Is Up to Speed on Card Billing...trying to cut costs wherever possible. Planet Payment neatly fills this gap. The business...international law, spent several years building Planet Payment and creating up-to-the-minute...
...is one of the social planets which has longer orbits...social life. This is the planet of luck. It also signifies...This is also a social planet same as Jupiter. It...slowest among the inner planets and it provides us with...is Uranus. This outer planet focuses on ones eccentricity...
Host Marriott, Planet Hollywood to put icing on cake with venture...based Host Marriott Services Corp. and Planet Hollywood International Inc. - whose...themed dessert cafe chain called Cool Planet. The chain, in development for nearly...
The Planet of the Apes Gets a Reboot and Rises. MANILA...The James Franco-starrer "Rise of the Planet of the Apes" shows just why man should...film is neither a sequel nor a remake of "Planet of the Apes" directed by Tim Burton and...
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...Greeks applied the term planet to the five major planets then known Mercury...and was regarded as a planet for many years. Additional minor planets have been discovered...from that of the solar planets; the oldest planet, discovered in the...
TERRESTRIAL PLANET the earth or a planet that resembles the earth in its physical characteristics. The terrestrial planets in the solar system are the earth , Mercury , Venus , and Mars . These planets are approximately the same size...
INFERIOR PLANET planet whose orbit lies inside that of the earth. There are two inferior planets, Mercury and Venus. They always seem to be close to the sun in the sky; the greatest elongation of Mercury is 28 , and that of Venus, 47 . For...
SUPERIOR PLANET planet whose orbit lies outside that of the earth. The superior planets are Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission...
MAJOR PLANETS OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM (table) Major Planets of the Solar System Planet Distance from the sun (AU) Period of revolution Period of rotation Mass (earth=1) Diameter (earth=1) Number of confirmed satellites Mercury 0.39 88...
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