The Facts Nearly Everyone Gets Wrong About Pluto

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Published 2023-12-17
Answering your questions about Pluto. Get an even higher Christmas deal using my link displate.com/astrumspace?art=5f04759ac338b or my discount code ASTRUM: 1-2 are 22%; 3+ are 33% OFF available until December 24th, 2023 (excl. Limited Editions and Lumino). Discount applies automatically at checkout.

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Why is Pluto not a Planet?
How dark is it on Pluto?
How can Hubble see distant galaxies clearly, but not Pluto?
What do Pluto and Charon orbit around?

All Comments (21)
  • @astrumspace
    Check out my BRAND NEW Displate collection of the moons of Jupiter and Saturn here: displate.com/astrumspace?art=5f04759ac338b Hopefully you can treat yourself or a space lover you know this Christma - plus 33% off if you get 3 or more before 24th Dec 2023.
  • @dpuyu
    Pluto is still a planet in my heart
  • @wangshuntian
    that makes me feel even much more respect to the guy who found pluto.
  • @Jubes83
    If it's any consolation do the Pluto fans, it went from being the smallest planet to the king of the dwarf planets.
  • @bullettube9863
    My grand-daughter asked me several years ago "why did they name Pluto after the Disney character". I had to explain that it was the reverse, Disney named Mickey's dog after Pluto the same year it was discovered in 1930. She is in college now and is a lot better informed then she used to be!
  • @user-pk9qo1gd6r
    3:21 very important visualisation, and a lot of people would benefit from watching that section in general. Galaxies aren't small, they're dim. Hubble's power is not in its ability to squint, but its attention span.
  • @tb9662
    Like only if you were born when Pluto was still a planet
  • @realvanman1
    Pluto being demoted from planet status had rather annoyed me as I grew up solidly with nine planets. But now that I know that the demotion is due to the discovery of an entire other asteroid belt, I feel privileged to have lived during the time of that discovery. Thanks for the education!
  • @mialotusmusic
    Someone should make a VR or AR program to view galaxies more brightly, would be amazing! You could shift from visible light to infrared etc
  • @astrumspace
    This is answering some of the most asked and liked questions I've found on my Pluto videos. I'm interested to hear if you like this format, and if you'd enjoy more videos like this exploring your questions. Find Pluto time where you are here: plutotime.app/ (the website on NASA I used originally when making the video has sadly closed down, but this seems to be a good alternative. I'm not affiliated with this website.)
  • @eelponna3145
    Pluto was such a surprise - many predicted that it would be a cold, dark, bland and inactive rock but it turned out to be a very strange and complex body with active surface features.
  • @saraphina0104
    Okay but the butternut squash and the kiwi taped to a stick was the funniest thing I've seen all day.
  • Once i saw detailed images of Pluto my mind was blown! I was not expecting that level of geological diversity, mineralization, signs of geologic activity, etc. Pluto has proven to be one of the most dynamic objects in our solar system. Only a few moons come close to Pluto's features. It makes me wonder what systems are fueling these dynamic aspects on Pluto? Is it tidal forces? Is it chemical reactions between different minerals? Is it certain elements that transition between solid ice form/liquid form/etc. depending on the pressure, friction, temperature it's experiencing? I'm really hoping to see a lot more research being done there. Pluto is s million times more interesting than Mars. Something that far away from the sun, it's amazing it's got interesting stuff occuring at all. I feel like there is a lot we can learn from Pluto.
  • @saintuk70
    The tiramisu dwarf-planet with a heart. I think it's fascinating and the fact it's active is really exciting - what else is out there.
  • @TheGhostGuitars
    05:35 There's another reason why Earth-based (both on or near Earth) telescopes have hard time imaging Pluto that Alex didn't mention: The galaxies and stars are sources of lights (IR to UV to Radio and higher wavelengths) thus they are easier to see, versus Pluto which is mostly (99.99+%) illuminated by what little amounts of sunlight that managed to reach Pluto AND reflects off it back to Earth. That rule about light getting weaker the further light travels applies to BOTH travel directions out from the Sun to Pluto AND back to Earth. This coupled with the incredibly tiny apparant relative size in the sky makes Pluto so durned hard to see. PS: the remaining <0.01% visibility is from starlight but that would be impossible for our current technology to be able to detect any such tiny objects solely by starlight at that distances. We already having hard enuff time finding trans-neptunian and kuiper objects using what little sunlight that reaches that far out and can STILL be visible when it gets reflected back to us.
  • @borisbabich
    New Horizons was one of the most exciting things, of many, that humanity did in space.
  • @raybeauvais296
    Every generation before us really had no idea how any of the planets actually looked in "Natural Light" 😉; and now every generation after us can spend their time on new questions.🧐 It has been an incredible 60 years! 🤯🤯 Thank you for these essays.
  • @j.p.ijsblok5304
    The fact that Pluto is classified as a dwarf planet doesn't make it any less beautiful. And since it revealed it's hard it means it still loves us.