Why Is Pluto No Longer Considered a Planet?

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Pluto is no longer classified as a planet due to a change in the International Astronomical Union's definition of "planet," which requires a celestial body to have cleared its orbit. Pluto fails this criterion because it shares its orbital zone with other objects, including Neptune. The discussion highlights that this decision is controversial, as it raises questions about the classification of other celestial bodies, including Neptune itself. Some participants express skepticism about the permanence of this classification, suggesting it may change again in the future. Ultimately, Pluto still exists but is now categorized differently in the solar system.
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Please explain why there is no pluto any more
 
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The International Astronomical Union recently changed the official definition of "planet." Pluto does not meet this new definition. Pluto still exists, but it is no longer considered a planet.

- Warren
 
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The alternatives were (basically) to include three new planets, or take away Pluto, and the later was chosen...
 
I doubt it will last for long, though. The new definition is very sketchy, and depends upon a body having "cleared out" the immediate vicinity of its orbit. Pluto was not disqualified because of its size, or the eccentricity of its ellipse, or its inclination to the orbital plane, but because it crosses Neptune's orbital radius. By this definition, Neptune (having failed to "clear out" Pluto from its orbit) should also be disqualified.

In fact, because there are still thousands of NEO's whizzing about the inner solar system, many of them crossing inside the orbit of Venus, the new definition may reduce the entire solar system to only one planet: Mercury!
 
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