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5 - Comets, asteroids (minor planets), and artificial satellites

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2009

Michael A. Covington
Affiliation:
University of Georgia
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Summary

Small objects in the Solar System

A century ago, astronomers' picture of the Solar System was neat and clear. There were eight planets and an asteroid belt, a set of small, rocky bodies between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter, presumably the remains of a planet that had exploded or never formed.

By 1950 the picture was a bit less tidy. One planet, Pluto, was abnormally small and had an odd orbit. A few asteroids had been discovered with orbits outside the asteroid belt.

Today the situation is even less neat, and we are having to rethink old categories. Though the belt between Mars and Jupiter is predominant, there are asteroids all over the Solar System, including a second belt, the Kuiper (KHOY-per) Belt, outside the orbit of Neptune.

There is no longer a clear distinction between asteroids and comets; the asteroid 2060 Chiron has played both roles. It now appears that a comet is merely an icy asteroid from the outer Solar System that has been deflected close enough to the Sun to vaporize the ice.

The distinction between asteroids and planets is also becoming blurred; some scientists want to reclassify Pluto as the largest Kuiper-belt asteroid. Meanwhile, some planetary satellites, such as Mars' potato-shaped companions Phobos and Deimos, are physically indistinguishable from asteroids.

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Information
Celestial Objects for Modern Telescopes
Practical Amateur Astronomy Volume 2
, pp. 62 - 79
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2002

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