You know Uranus, Neptune,
and Pluto. But how about their smaller cousins Eris, Ceres,
Orcus, and Makemake? How about Easterbunny?
These are all names given to relatively large “planet-like”
objects recently found in the outer reaches of our solar system.
Some were just temporary nicknames, others are now official and
permanent.
Each has a unique story.
“The names we chose are
important,” says Caltech astronomer Mike Brown, who had a hand
in many of the discoveries. “These objects are a part of our
solar system; they're in our neighbourhood. We ‘gravitate’ to
them more if they have real names, instead of technical names
like 2003 UB313.” Nearby planets such as Venus and Mars have
been known since antiquity and were named by the ancient Romans
after their gods. In modern times, though, who gets to name
newly discovered dwarf planets and other important solar-system
bodies? In short, whoever finds it names it. For example, a few
days after Easter 2005, Brown and his colleagues discovered a
bright dwarf planet orbiting in the Kuiper belt. The team’s
informal nickname for this new object quickly became Easterbunny.
However, ever since its formation in 1919, the International
Astronomical Union (IAU) ultimately decides whether to accept or
reject the name suggested by an object’s discoverers. "Easterbunny"
probably wouldn’t be approved.
According to IAU guidelines, comets are named after whoever
discovered them—such as comet Hale-Bopp, named after its
discoverers Alan Hale and Thomas Bopp. Asteroids can be named
almost anything. IAU rules state that objects in the Kuiper belt
should be given mythological names related to creation.
So Brown’s team started brainstorming. They considered several
Easter-esque names: Eostre, the pagan mythological figure that
may be Easter’s namesake; Manabozho, the Algonquin rabbit
trickster god.
In the end, they settled on Makemake (pronounced MAH-kay MAH-kay),
the creator of humanity in the mythology of Easter Island, so
named because Europeans first arrived there on Easter 1722.
Other names have other rationales. The dwarf planet discovered
in 2005 that triggered a fierce debate over Pluto’s status was
named Eris, for the Greek goddess of strife and discord. Another
dwarf planet with an orbit that mirrors Pluto’s was dubbed
Orcus, a god in Etruscan mythology that, like Pluto, ruled the
underworld.
Brown says he takes “this naming business” very seriously and
probably spends too much time on it. “But I enjoy it.” More
tales of discovery and naming may be found in Brown's blog.
Constellations have also been named after ancient gods, human
figures, and animals.
Artist’s rendering of dwarf planet MakeMake, discovered around
Easter 2005. Unlikely to gain acceptance their nickname
Easterbunny, the discoverers named it for the god of humanity in
the mythology of Easter Island.
This article was provided
by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of
Technology, under a contract with the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration.
If
you would like to know more about the naming of MakeMake then
visit
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