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    The young girl that named Pluto

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    A Starry Morning in Oxford

    In 1930โ€™s Oxford, breakfast conversations between grandparents and their grandchildren werenโ€™t usually front-page news. But for Venetia Burney, a bright-eyed student, one such conversation would etch her name in the annals of history. This young girl, residing amidst the cobblestone streets and towering spires of Oxford, was about to play a key role in the narrative of the universe.

    The topic of the day? A newfound celestial body, a mysterious object located even beyond the distant Neptune.

    An Eager Question

    As Venetia and her family chewed over the details, the most significant question emerged: โ€œWhat to name this new discovery?โ€ This wasnโ€™t just a routine discovery; it was a game-changer, reshaping our understanding of our own solar system.

    Venetia, with her school-fueled knowledge of Greek and Roman mythology, let her imagination roam. Connecting the cool, remote characteristics of the new planet to the mythological underworld, she posed a simple, yet profound suggestion: โ€œWhat about Pluto?โ€

    From Idea to Immortality

    But how did an 11-year-old come up with such a fitting name? Venetia was no stranger to the stars. She had fond memories of astronomy lessons outside university parks where students molded the sun and planets out of clay, visually and tangibly representing the solar system. These experiences had sown the seeds of cosmic curiosity in her mind.

    Upon hearing her suggestion, her grandfather, Falconer Madan, didnโ€™t just dismiss it as childโ€™s play. He saw its value. Having spent years surrounded by knowledge at the Bodleian Library, he promptly wrote to Professor Herbert Hall Turner. And Turner, recognizing the merit of the name, ensured it traveled across the Atlantic to the Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona.

    The name Pluto struck a chord. Besides being the Roman god of the underworld, representing the mysterious characteristics of the new planet, the initials โ€œPlโ€ were an ode to Percival Lowell, the visionary behind the mission to locate this celestial body.

    Letters from Venetiaโ€™s grandfather, F. Madan, to Professor Henry Herbert Turner. Madanโ€™s brother had named the Martian moons Deimos and Phobos, so there was already a family precedent.

    Destiny or Coincidence?

    One might wonder: was Venetiaโ€™s suggestion mere coincidence or a stroke of destiny? Whatever it was, the universe seemed to conspire in her favor. Her proposal was more than apt. It was a confluence of mythological relevance, a nod to Percival Lowell, and an intuitive understanding of the planetโ€™s remote nature.

    However, not all acknowledged Venetiaโ€™s role immediately. Some believed the planet was named after Walt Disneyโ€™s dog, but as clarified later, the cartoon dog was inspired by the planet, not the reverse.

    The Afterglow of Recognition

    Venetiaโ€™s newfound fame was met with adoration and some envy. The corridors of her school echoed with whispers and giggles, dubbing her โ€œPlutonia.โ€ And while the limelight faded, her story re-emerged years later in Patrick Mooreโ€™s 1984 โ€˜Sky & Telescopeโ€™ article.

    Her role in naming Pluto made waves across the Atlantic. American schools, journalists, and space enthusiasts reached out, turning the humble Oxford girl into an astronomical celebrity. Her trip to the Leicester Space Centreโ€™s Sir Patrick Moore Planetarium was particularly notable, where she was celebrated as a living legend.

    A Celestial Enigma

    Although Venetiaโ€™s legacy in naming Pluto remains unchallenged, our understanding of the celestial body she named has transformed over the years. Once seen as the ninth and most distant planet from the sun, Pluto is situated within the enigmatic Kuiper Belt. This vast expanse, extending beyond Neptune, teems with numerous icy, rocky bodies larger than 62 miles across and a staggering count of over a trillion comets.

    Plutoโ€™s initial discovery was rooted in observations by American astronomer Percival Lowell. In 1905, while monitoring unusual deviations in the orbits of Neptune and Uranus, Lowell hypothesized another planetary entity influencing these deviations. He made predictions of its location in 1915 but passed away a decade and a half before Pluto was eventually identified by Clyde Tombaugh at the Lowell Observatory in 1930.

    A Heated Debacle: Why Pluto Lost Its Status

    By 2006, Plutoโ€™s classification as a planet came under scrutiny, resulting in its reclassification as a dwarf planet. This change wasnโ€™t universally accepted and triggered intense debates both within and outside the scientific community.

    But why did this happen? According to Emily Safron, an astronomy instructor at Case Western Reserve University, as we learned more about the Kuiper Belt, it became evident that Pluto wasnโ€™t as unique as previously thought. Several celestial bodies mirrored Plutoโ€™s characteristics, sometimes even more closely than Pluto mirrored the other traditional planets.

    The International Astronomical Union, in an attempt to streamline the definition of a โ€˜planetโ€™, established three criteria:

    • The object must orbit the sun.
      • It must have a sizeable mass to achieve a roughly spherical shape.
    • It must clear its orbit of similarly massive objects.

    While Pluto met the first two conditions, it faltered on the third. Intriguingly, Charon, one of Plutoโ€™s moons, has almost half of its size. Thus, instead of being the smallest entity in the planet category, Pluto found a new identity as the most prominent member of the dwarf planet group.

    Venetia Burney Phair

    A Legacy Beyond the Stars

    Venetiaโ€™s life was more than just naming Pluto. Her multifaceted journey saw her don many hats โ€“ from a chartered accountant to a teacher of history and economics. And while debates raged on about Plutoโ€™s planetary status, Venetiaโ€™s contribution stood unchallenged. She passed away in April 2009, but her story, a tale of curiosity and wonder, will always orbit our consciousness.

    Plutoโ€™s journey from being heralded as the ninth planet to its current status as a dwarf planet showcases the ever-evolving nature of scientific understanding. As our telescopes pierce further into the cosmos and our knowledge expands, itโ€™s crucial to remember the joy of discovery, the same joy that an 11-year-old Venetia felt one fateful morning in Oxford.

    Today, as we gaze up at the night sky, amidst the myriad stars and galaxies, Pluto twinkles back โ€“ a testament to an 11-year-oldโ€™s imagination and the enduring power of names.

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