Blackleaf
Aug 19 2005, 05:51 PM
The Times.
Opinion - Ben Macintyre
August 19, 2005
It's cute, it's spherical, but can we not find a better name than 2003UB313?
Ben Macintyre
FAR OUT on the edge of the solar system, a new planet has been discovered — a lump of ice nine billion miles from the sun, orbiting at the stately rate of once every 560 years. The astronomical community is cooing over the new arrival, which was announced last month, weighing in with a diameter of some 3,000km and a surface temperature of minus 459F. But as with every newborn, there is a dilemma: scientists cannot agree about what (on earth) to call this tenth planet, the youngest —addition to the planetary family.
Currently, the planet still retains the official and unlovely moniker 2003UB313, a name that even its mother couldn’t love. The astronomer who discovered it, Mike Brown, of Caltech, nicknamed the lump Xena, after the semi-clad warrior princess of the American television series, and it has stuck. How is that for a reflection of our cultural impoverishment?
Faced with a vital new discovery in space, the best name we can come up with is that of a kick-boxing war-lady played by Lucy Lawless in a loin cloth. We may as well call it Bruce Forsyth, or Shane Warne, or Vicky Pollard. Come to think of it, Planet Kylie has a a certain appeal.
Naming a planet is no simple process, for the International Astronomical Union (IAU), the body officially in charge of assigning astronomical names, is sensitive to tradition. It does not do jokes, ever since the seventh planet from the sun was named Uranus, unleashing an endless galaxy of schoolboy sniggering.
The IAU rules are firm: the new name must be a single word, 16 characters or fewer, pronounceable, non- offensive, and sufficiently different from the existing name of a minor planet or natural planetary satellite. A planet cannot be named after people or events known for their military or political activities until 100 years after the person died or the event occurred. Names with commercial associations are not permitted, which rules out planet Disney and planet Pepsi. Names of pets are discouraged. (Douglas Adams, in his The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, describes a tenth planet: “The planet was named Persephone, but rapidly nicknamed Rupert after some astronomer’s parrot — there was some tediously heart-warming story attached to this — and that was all very wonderful and lovely.”
In imperial times, naming things was easy. The Victorians, immune to hubris, named what they found after their kings and queens, their heroes and heroines, their benefactors, their battles and the places they had known from home. Today, hemmed in by political sensitivity, racial and gender awareness, we can no longer simply name things after dead, white males. Most of the great names from classical mythology have already been taken. Mike Brown wanted to call his new planet Persephone — in a nod to the planet’s frozen surface that would also adjust the gender balance in the male-dominated solar system — but sadly Persephone was used in 1895 as a name for the 399th known asteroid.
We are simply running out of good names, on earth as in space. Victoria Beckham — unable to find names for her children from literary sources because, by her own admission, she has never read a book — has resorted to making up her own: Brooklyn, Romeo, Cruz. Celebrities have led the way in idiotic names: Peaches (Geldof); Moon Unit (Zappa); Zahara (Jolie). But as with children, so with other worlds. Planet Beauregard or Chardonnay may seem cool today, but the planet won’t thank us when it grows up, and a few millennia from now these will seem hopelessly dated.
The last planet to be “discovered”, 75 years ago, was Pluto, named by Venetia Burney, an 11-year-old from Oxford who thought that the distant, dark planet should be named after the Roman god of the underworld. Mike Brown and the IAU will have the final say over the naming of the new sphere, but in an age of democracy it seems only right that the nomenclature should reflect the people’s choice. Among the names so far submitted to New Scientist are: Cerberus, Titan, Bob, Einstein, Mandela, Galileo, Deca, Loki (the Norse God of Mischief) and Pax. Argentine astronomers overwhelmingly favour calling the tenth planet Maradona, on the ground that Diego was the greatest No 10 in history.
Astronomy is not the only branch of science to struggle with nomenclature. So many different living organisms have been discovered that scientists have been forced into extreme lateral thinking. Scientists at Cornell recently named three new slime-mould beetles A. bushi, A. cheneyi and A. rumsfeldi. Apparently this was taken by the White House as a compliment. The insect world now boasts a Heerz tooya, an Apopyllus now and a Pieza rhea. The oceans contain an Ittibittium, a genus of molluscs slightly smaller than those named Bittium. There will be much more of this sort of thing: among insects alone, an estimated nine million species have yet to be named. But one scientist, who discovered a new snail in Fiji, demonstrated his attitude to this branch of wit by calling his discovery Ba humbugi.
The World Conservation Society recently auctioned off the name of a new species of Bolivian monkey for $650,000 to the Golden Palace online casino, with profits to be spent on preserving endangered species. The new name for the animal is Callicebus aureipalatii, Latin for “golden palace”.
This may be one solution to the unnamed planet. If a monkey is worth $650,000, what price an immense lump of ice at the outer edge of the solar system? Having a Planet Gates or a Planet Abramovich seems a small price to pay for the money that would go to astronomical research.
The IAU would doubtless veto any such move, which still leaves us without a proper handle for 2003UB313, alias Xena, hurtling through the void, cold and anonymous. The name must be honest, pithy yet redolent, recalling ancient antiquity as well as popular culture, reflecting our modern beliefs and our classical heritage, the humanity of The Simpsons and the grandeur of the Odyssey. Yes, there is only one possible name for the new heavenly body: Planet Homer.
thetimesonline.co.uk
NJC
Aug 19 2005, 08:08 PM
NJCjust kidding i have no idea
Gabriel
Aug 19 2005, 08:17 PM
lets name it bob or a really cool greek name.
Planet BFE LOL!
Nirwana
Aug 19 2005, 11:02 PM
"It's cute, it's spherical"
What about gheyanus? just a thought
Dowdy
Aug 20 2005, 12:53 PM
Just bring some nukes to blow it out of orbit (if thats possible) and bring it to Mars, then just let it melt. Then we don't have to worry about this stupid name and we can colonise Mars
matthewgoad
Aug 20 2005, 02:29 PM
How about we call it, Hisanus, you know we already have uranus.. Or about ThatSOBPlanetthatisfaraway. That's what they'll call it in North Carolina.
Thanato
Aug 20 2005, 03:35 PM
Gotta call it Rupert!!!!
RUPERT!!!!
~Thanato
StalingradK
Aug 21 2005, 10:43 PM
I vote SuperGigliforloniconOsicaonaolan
STIX
Aug 22 2005, 06:03 AM
WHAT ABOUT NIBIRU!?

If its completley ice, would it not be hot in the center?
MedicTJ
Aug 22 2005, 08:51 AM
I vote to call it, "Notaplanetatall"
Just as Pluto is "Notaplanetatall"
If Pluto had been discovered in 1989 (about the time Voyager 2 passed by Neptune) instead of 1930, it wouldn't be classified as a planet today.
And this new "planet" would merely be classified the same way.
One of literally MILLIONS of icy bodies that orbit the sun in the Kuiper belt.
And if a planet is classified as a planet by being "spherical", then we might as well promote the asteroid, "Ceres" to planetary status as well.
It's just as spherical as this new "planet" that has been found. And it resides in the asteroid belt.
thebarman
Aug 22 2005, 12:37 PM
I think size is more of a factor rather than shape, besides none of the planets are truely spherical they are eliptical.
If this planet was smaller than Pluto we probably wouldn't have classed this as a planet, but the fact that Pluto is a planet means anything bigger should be aswell.
I think Loki, God of mischief is a good name, it has hidden from view all these years, has caused a great deal of controversy and it's a name that wont get outdated.
Oddly however, planet Homer has a nice ring to it
Gabriel
Aug 25 2005, 08:03 PM
"Call it Jeff" hey thats my name!
hazzard
Aug 26 2005, 10:13 AM
What should it be?
Since the others are named after Roman Gods they should stick with that I suppose, how about Juno, Vulcan, or maybe even Minerva if you want to get freaky
Just as long as they don't name it Titanus.
I'm not British
Aug 27 2005, 04:05 AM
I agree with Hazzard that it should be a Roman Mythological name but aren't there any other Gods left beside those three?
JennRose
Aug 27 2005, 04:21 AM
Well there is also Diana(Artemis). But I vote for Juno.
professorwizard
Aug 27 2005, 11:42 PM
QUOTE(I'm not British @ Aug 26 2005, 09:05 PM)
I agree with Hazzard that it should be a Roman Mythological name but aren't there any other Gods left beside those three?
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Lots and lots of minor gods--appropriate for what is at best a minor planet...Pan?
Personally, I think there's enough cosmic flotsam named after gods. There could be a contest to choose a name, or to choose who names it. Who was the first astronomer to find it? Doesn't that individual automatically get naming rights...?
Meji
Aug 28 2005, 10:20 AM
I hope planets don't have feelings... because I would think Uranus is the most deppressed, with all the name calling... Lets name the new planet... Lucky... or Xiao... No! Lucky... wait I don't know.
PadawanOsswe
Aug 29 2005, 05:18 AM
Hoth... its an Ice planet after all
PARZIVAL
Aug 30 2005, 03:30 PM
Nibiru, Wormwood, Gabriels' Fist......
all monikers point towards the same theory.
We have entered the "DEFCON ZERO" paradigm gentlemen.
Planet X is inbound and rapidly approaching.
Gone,
Parzival
The Council of Nine
Aug 31 2005, 10:50 AM
as long as we dont call it Beckham i dont care!!!... Vulcan would be cool but sad!
Blackleaf
Aug 31 2005, 05:53 PM
We should either call it Blackleaf (after me) or Gloria, after Gloria Estefan.
justcallmefox
Aug 31 2005, 06:10 PM
i think star trek fans everywhere would be quite happy to see it named Vulcan.
Although Defcon Zero DOES have a certain ring to it...
Baku
Aug 31 2005, 09:00 PM
Well since all the planets in our solar system are named after Roman Gods then why make an exception on this planet? I think we should choose out of the following Roman God names:
Jupiter - King of the Gods
Juno - Queen of the Gods
Neptune - God of the Sea
Pluto - God of Death
Apollo - God of the Sun
Diana - Goddess of the Moon
Mars - God of War
Venus - Goddess of Love
Cupid - God of Love
Mercury - Messenger of the Gods
Minerva - Goddess of Wisdom
Ceres - The Earth Goddess
Proserpine - Goddess of the Underworld
Vulcan - The Smith God
Bacchus - God of Wine
Saturn - God of Time
Vesta - Goddess of the Home
Janus - God of Doors
Uranus - Father of Saturn
Maia - Goddess of Growth
SourcePersonally I think we should go for Minerva the Goddess of wisdom, because it should cool and most similar in my opinion
Pannkakskungen
Aug 31 2005, 09:35 PM
I think we should call it Bob, simple and easy to remember. Im gonna call it Bob from this point.
Gmac1000
Aug 31 2005, 11:53 PM
I'm with you ...Bob its is ..."Bob is commint to beat the snot out of us"I can see it now in the tabloids.
Pannkakskungen
Sep 1 2005, 07:12 AM
Yes, Bob is coming, run for your life, the inhabitants of Bob, known as Bobs are very angry with us for not discovering Bob until now.
hazzard
Sep 1 2005, 09:45 AM
QUOTE(Pannkakskungen @ Sep 1 2005, 07:12 AM)
Yes, Bob is coming, run for your life, the inhabitants of Bob, known as Bobs are very angry with us for not discovering Bob until now.
Nameless
Sep 3 2005, 01:42 AM
I think Menerva is a highly appropriate name. As Baku said "It is the Godess of wisdom" and we needed inteligence to be able to see the planet at all.
Unfortunately, it's also the name of Professor Mcgonigall in the well known series Harry Potter.
DEBUNKER
Sep 3 2005, 11:29 AM
How about naming the KBO (sure isnt a planet) Yo mama.
dantheman2435
Sep 3 2005, 03:50 PM
Niburu or Bacchus since most of us are drunkards.
Yelekiah
Sep 5 2005, 06:25 AM
QUOTE(thebarman @ Aug 22 2005, 08:37 AM)
I think Loki, God of mischief is a good name, it has hidden from view all these years, has caused a great deal of controversy and it's a name that wont get outdated.

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That's a good one.
Thanato
Sep 6 2005, 01:36 AM
I still go with Rupert.
~Thanato
suruzal
Sep 14 2005, 05:47 AM
Whats the Defcon 0 paradigm anybody?