You are Unregistered, please register to gain Full access.    

New cases in Pous 2064, HIV = 175, AIDS = 26, Death = 2. HIV rate is very high in Housewives than sex workers in Nepal ! ! ! HIV status in Nepal till 2005: Total Adult=70000, Adult Prevalence (15-49)=0.55%, Number of Women (15-49) LWHA=15,310 (22%), HIV Prevalence rate in IDUs=32.7%, HIV prevalence rate in sex worker=3.8%, HIV prevalence rate in client of SW=2.1%. The latest U.N. report shows that 65 million people have been infected with HIV since it was first identified 25 years ago. Twenty five million people have died of AIDS.

Welcome to the xenoMED, an online Medical Community where Academically sound, Professionally conscious and Socially responsible Medical Students, Doctors & Health Professionals interact with each other globally.

Medicine is the only profession that incessantly tries to destroy its own existence. Howsoever you may be associated with basic and/or clinical medicine - student or professor, physician or surgeon, undergraduate or postgraduate - this is your place to share your knowledge, and learn more. Just get the message across!

You are currently viewing our communiy as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, Join Our Medical Cummunity Today!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us.
Go Back   xenoMED > General > General Talks
General Talks Feel free to talk about anything and everything...

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
(#1 (permalink))
Old
CSF's Avatar
CSF is Offline
Senior Member
 
Blog Entries: 3
Thanks: 5
Thanked 88 Times in 87 Posts
Solar System Could Gain New Planets Under Definition Change - 16-08-2006, 07:50 PM


Artist's rendition of solar system

There may soon be three new planets in our solar system. The expansion would be the result of a proposed new definition of what a planet is. The change is controversial, but if adopted by astronomy's governing body, it could eventually mean there will be many more than 12 planets.


Distant Pluto, the last official planet to be discovered, may keep its rank. For years, astronomers have wanted to demote it from planetary status because it was not quite like the eight classical planets closer to the sun. Its tilted orbit and its icy composition set it apart from the rocky planets such as Earth and the gas giants Saturn and Jupiter.

But a new definition of planets proposed at the International Astronomical Union meeting in Prague would retain Pluto's standing and add three more bodies.



Pluto and its satellite CharonThey are Pluto's companion Charon, the asteroid Ceres, and a more distant body discovered last year that is not yet named, but known temporarily as UB 313.

"This is a revolution in our understanding of the solar system," explained Massachusetts Institute of Technology scientist Richard Binzel, a member of the astronomical union's planet definition committee. He says it took two years of tough deliberations to reach the new definition.

The revision is necessary, says Binzel, because of improved observations that make better distinctions within our solar system. This includes the 1992 discovery that there are icy bodies in the region beyond Pluto called the Kuiper Belt.

"We now know that out beyond Neptune and, in fact, out beyond Pluto, is a zone of bodies, literally thousands of bodies, that are basically a third region of our solar system. In that region, we know that there are many Pluto-like objects remaining to be discovered," Binzel said.

The long accepted view of a planet has been anything that orbits a star and is not itself a star. This broad meaning included asteroids and many other smaller objects as minor planets.

The new definition is much more exclusive. Binzel and his colleagues eliminated the minor planet category and included only those bodies orbiting stars that have enough gravity to pull themselves into a sphere. They do not include moons of planets.

"After we made that definition, we stopped and looked back and said, 'Okay, where is Pluto?' Pluto falls well above the boundary. It's a spherical object and, by gosh, Pluto makes the list," Binzel says.

Charon also makes the list because it is not a moon of Pluto as once thought. But in recognition that Pluto, Charon, UB 313 and other similar bodies are different in composition and angle of orbit, the new planet definition calls them plutons.

The change is controversial. Astronomer Scott Sheppard of the Carnegie Institution in Washington argues that plutons should not be considered planets because, unlike the eight major ones, their orbits are not independent. Instead, they are attuned to that of Neptune. Furthermore, he says their gravitational fields do not dominate their local environment.

"Pluto and UB 313 and the rest of the thousands of Kuiper Belt objects beyond Neptune, since they formed and evolved in a very similar manner, should be grouped together. So I would personally consider Pluto and the rest of the Kuiper Belt objects not really planets, but the third domain of the solar system or something like that," Sheppard says.

The astronomer who discovered UB 313 last year, Michael Brown of the California Institute of Technology, takes a middle view. He maintains that size should be considered.

"Pluto has been called a planet for so long that I think we are never going to not call Pluto a planet," Brown said. "If Pluto is going to be called a planet, then anything larger than Pluto is a planet. Things that are smaller I think we just call them typical members of the Kuiper Belt and they do not join this very special class of things that are planets."

His view would maintain his discovery as a planet because it is bigger than Pluto.

The new planet definition must now be approved by a majority of the nearly 2,500 astronomers attending the Prague meeting from 75 nations. But Scott Sheppard is not sure that would settle the issue.

"I think no matter what the International Astronomical Union decides, it will still be a debate for years to come," Sheppard said.


  • I'm a clear, colorless fluid, contain small quantities of glucose and protein.
  • I fill the ventricles of the brain and the central canal of the spinal cord.
  • You can get me through Lumbar Puncture.
  • If I have White blood Cells or bacteria - Meningitis result.
Reply With Quote
The Following User Says Thank You to CSF For This Useful Post:
RonSijm (19-08-2008)
(#2 (permalink))
Old
CSF's Avatar
CSF is Offline
Senior Member
 
Blog Entries: 3
Thanks: 5
Thanked 88 Times in 87 Posts
Astronomical cost of planet row - 20-08-2006, 09:57 AM

Astronomical cost of planet row
Jenny Legg Published: 18 August 2006



The planets as captured by Nasa spacecraft from the top down: Mercury, Venus, Earth with moon, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. Pluto is absent as no craft has yet visitedSir Patrick Moore, the astronomer, this week called for text books to be rewritten to show eight, not nine, planets in the solar system.

His comments came as the International Astronomical Union (IAU) was considering whether there are in fact 12 planets, following a debate over the status of Pluto in the solar system.

Whatever the outcome of the deliberations, publishers could lose million of pounds reprinting books with the latest information.

Sir Patrick, who presented The Sky at Night on the BBC for more than 40 years, said: “It’s perfectly obvious. Pluto is not a planet in the way Mercury or Venus are. It was only discovered in about 1930 and we thought it was much larger than it is.”

He said a planet was broadly defined as a spherical body with a solid or gaseous surface, measuring more than 3,000 miles in diameter and which travels around the sun. Pluto measures just 1,467 miles. “Textbooks should be reprinted. There are eight planets, not nine,” Sir Patrick said. The eight he says are Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.

However, the IAU, of which he is a member, will next week decide whether there are 12 planets in the solar system.

It follows the discovery of several planet-like objects including Ceres, the largest object in an asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter; Pluto’s moon Charon and now Xena, a 1,864 mile-wide object found on the edge of the solar system, known as the Kuiper Belt.

Members will vote on a new definition for planets, which would include the eight classic planets as defined by Sir Patrick and “Plutons” which are different because they take longer than 200 years to orbit the sun and their orbits are highly tilted and non-circular. Plutons would include Pluto, Ceres and Xena.

Graham Taylor, director of the Educational Publishers’ Council, said: “If there is a significant change in the definition of what is a planet and what represents the solar system every science text book will have to be amended as soon as possible.”

He said text books were updated each year but if an immediate change was made existing stock would have to be scrapped costing publishers millions of pounds.

He estimated the secondary science textbook market alone was worth about £10 to £15 million and that publishers could stand to lose at least 25 per cent of the cover price of each book if they were forced to reprint books.

Dr Derek Bell, chief executive of the Association of Science Education, said schools and exam boards would need to carefully consider syllabuses relating to space and the solar system if the IAU agrees the change.


  • I'm a clear, colorless fluid, contain small quantities of glucose and protein.
  • I fill the ventricles of the brain and the central canal of the spinal cord.
  • You can get me through Lumbar Puncture.
  • If I have White blood Cells or bacteria - Meningitis result.
Reply With Quote
The Following User Says Thank You to CSF For This Useful Post:
RonSijm (19-08-2008)
Reply


Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
546 QA Biochemistry Test Oak Step I 1 30-10-2007 12:23 AM
are diseases inevitable? studentcurious Message 3 06-05-2006 09:07 AM



Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.3
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 3.1.0
vBulletin Skin developed by: vBStyles.com
Copyright © 2005-2007 xenoMED, Kathmandu, Nepal
Hosted and Maintained by: