Traditionally dated to 4004 BC (see, amongst many others, AnswersInGenesis.org). As we’re now in 2015 AD, they accept almost two decades more than 6000 years. QED.Glenn E. wrote:convinced the praticioners of certain religions that the Earth is, in fact, more than 6000 years old.
Significant figures
Significant figures
Split from another form of drivel.
Re: A reason to get up early
Too many significant digits. I used one, you get one. Your decades are lost as rounding errors.jdaw1 wrote:Traditionally dated to 4004 BC (see, amongst many others, AnswersInGenesis.org). As we’re now in 2015 AD, they accept almost two decades more than 6000 years. QED.Glenn E. wrote:convinced the praticioners of certain religions that the Earth is, in fact, more than 6000 years old.
Glenn Elliott
Re: A reason to get up early
Oh, you meant six millennia. In which case, very fair, even if slightly confused by you writing “6000 years”. Which, silly me, I took to mean 6000 years.Glenn E. wrote:Too many significant digits. I used one, you get one. Your decades are lost as rounding errors.jdaw1 wrote:Traditionally dated to 4004 BC (see, amongst many others, AnswersInGenesis.org). As we’re now in 2015 AD, they accept almost two decades more than 6000 years. QED.Glenn E. wrote:convinced the praticioners of certain religions that the Earth is, in fact, more than 6000 years old.
Re: A reason to get up early
No, I meant 6000 years. Not 6000.0 years.jdaw1 wrote:Oh, you meant six millennia. In which case, very fair, even if slightly confused by you writing “6000 years”. Which, silly me, I took to mean 6000 years.Glenn E. wrote:Too many significant digits. I used one, you get one. Your decades are lost as rounding errors.jdaw1 wrote:Traditionally dated to 4004 BC (see, amongst many others, AnswersInGenesis.org). As we’re now in 2015 AD, they accept almost two decades more than 6000 years. QED.Glenn E. wrote:convinced the praticioners of certain religions that the Earth is, in fact, more than 6000 years old.
Perhaps you do it differently in the UK, but here in 'Murica trailing zeros are not considered significant unless followed by a decimal point.
Glenn Elliott
Re: A reason to get up early
Here on ThePortForum, if I sell you 600 bottles of Fonseca 1970 and deliver only 590, grumbling would be expected. Likewise with dates: offering for sale a 1980 but delivering a 1978 would also cause unhappiness.Glenn E. wrote:Perhaps you do it differently in the UK, but here in 'Murica trailing zeros are not considered significant unless followed by a decimal point.
(Should this conversation be split? Or just ended? Or both?)
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Re: A reason to get up early
Entirely correct, BUT you have to state how many significant digits are present, which you did not, otherwise all digits are assumed to be significant.Glenn E. wrote:Perhaps you do it differently in the UK, but here in 'Murica trailing zeros are not considered significant unless followed by a decimal point.
Please do. Dependent on the price there could be no grumbling at all, even if you are 100 bottles short - though a diatribe on numeracy would be highly likely.jdaw1 wrote:Here on ThePortForum, if I sell you 600 bottles of Fonseca 1970 and deliver only 590, grumbling would be expected.
Re: A reason to get up early
Unless and until pedantry kicks in.PhilW wrote:Entirely correct, BUT you have to state how many significant digits are present, which you did not, otherwise all digits are assumed to be significant.Glenn E. wrote:Perhaps you do it differently in the UK, but here in 'Murica trailing zeros are not considered significant unless followed by a decimal point.
A neutral 3rd party expert witness has commented, so I withdraw. In the future jdaw1 may interpret my use of "planet" in reference to Pluto has a shorter and easier to type abbreviated form of "dwarf planet".
Glenn Elliott
Re: Significant figures
Now this off-topic drivel has been split from the topic from which it was off (aside to the aside of the aside: I’m loving the prepositional torture), we can do the Pluto-is-Pluto-isn’t rant. I’ll show my cards: the Stern–Levison parameter Λ is an excellent distinction between proper planets and things too small to be proper planets.Glenn E. wrote:In the future jdaw1 may interpret my use of "planet" in reference to Pluto has a shorter and easier to type abbreviated form of "dwarf planet".
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Re: Significant figures
But... is or is not a dwarf planet a subtype of planet?
Re: Significant figures
Not.PhilW wrote:But... is or is not a dwarf planet a subtype of planet?
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- Dalva Golden White Colheita 1952
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Re: Significant figures
Daft naming convention then...
Re: Significant figures
If you are going to spend your days remarking on what is stupid in the world, expect to be very busy. (Whether or not you contribute to the cricket/ashes thread.)PhilW wrote:Daft naming convention then...
Re: Significant figures
When the definition of a "planet" requires a special clause to allow Earth, Mars, Jupiter, and Neptune to qualify - but not Pluto - then it is a bad definition.jdaw1 wrote:Now this off-topic drivel has been split from the topic from which it was off (aside to the aside of the aside: I’m loving the prepositional torture), we can do the Pluto-is-Pluto-isn’t rant. I’ll show my cards: the Stern–Levison parameter Λ is an excellent distinction between proper planets and things too small to be proper planets.Glenn E. wrote:In the future jdaw1 may interpret my use of "planet" in reference to Pluto has a shorter and easier to type abbreviated form of "dwarf planet".
Glenn Elliott
Re: Significant figures
If that were true, it would be a bad definition. But it isn’t.Glenn E. wrote:When the definition of a "planet" requires a special clause to allow Earth, Mars, Jupiter, and Neptune to qualify - but not Pluto - then it is a bad definition.
Λ = k × M² / P, where M = mass, P = orbital period, and k is effectively a constant. For the real planets, it’s much much chunkier than 1. For the non-planets, much much smaller. Of the planets, smallest for Mars, at ≈942. Of the non-planets, largest for Pluto at ≈0.00295 then Eris at ≈0.00215. That’s robust.
Re: Significant figures
I read the wiki and I agree with Glenn. I do not understand the detail of the maths, but the line has been drawn in a place where some things are planets and some things are not. That line could equally have well been drawn in a place where the gas giants were planets and the rocks like Earth were not. That is subjective judgement, not a fact.jdaw1 wrote:If that were true, it would be a bad definition. But it isn’t.Glenn E. wrote:When the definition of a "planet" requires a special clause to allow Earth, Mars, Jupiter, and Neptune to qualify - but not Pluto - then it is a bad definition.
Λ = k × M² / P, where M = mass, P = orbital period, and k is effectively a constant. For the real planets, it’s much much chunkier than 1. For the non-planets, much much smaller. Of the planets, smallest for Mars, at ≈942. Of the non-planets, largest for Pluto at ≈0.00295 then Eris at ≈0.00215. That’s robust.
This is a case of science trying to impose a meaningless rule and then trying to defend itself with flawed logic.
"The first duty of Port is to be red"
Ernest H. Cockburn
Ernest H. Cockburn
Re: Significant figures
If true, a powerful argument. But not so. Things bigger than 1 are massively bigger than 1, things smaller are very much smaller. No close cases.DRT wrote:That line could equally have well been drawn in a place where the gas giants were planets and the rocks like Earth were not.
Λ determines whether things gravitationally dominate their neighbourhood. Only one thing can. For instance, Jupiter can have Trojans in its Lagrange point, and they’re stable. But if the Trojans should reach ≈10%ish of the mass of the dominant body, things become unstable. So three cases possible.
• Largest object in this orbit large enough for Λ>>1, and Trojans small. Stable. Largest object a planet. Hurray!
• Largest object in this orbit large enough for Λ>>1, and Trojans >10% of largest object. Unstable — quickly falls apart. Problem case doesn’t last long.
• Largest object in this orbit has Λ<<1, so has too little effect on other bodies to dominate them. Welcome to the asteroid belt / Kuiper belt / etc.
Re: Significant figures
We argue not with the math, but rather with the choice to use that particular line in the sand as the definition. There is no scientific reason to define a planet as an object that clears its orbit, or that when it fails to clear its orbit like Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Neptune, and Pluto, said orbit is stable which conveniently excludes Pluto.
Glenn Elliott
Re: Significant figures
I agree that the phrasing ‘clearing the neighbourhood’ is wrong. It should be ‘dominating the neighbourhood’.
Let’s start elsewhere. Do you agree that many asteroids are not planets? If you think that every pebble in solar orbit is a planet, then the nature of the disagreement is clear. If not, then there are some solar-orbiting natural things that are deemed planets, and some that are not. How would you draw the line?
The problem, as I understand it, is a shortage of more plausible lines. Suggest one.
Let’s start elsewhere. Do you agree that many asteroids are not planets? If you think that every pebble in solar orbit is a planet, then the nature of the disagreement is clear. If not, then there are some solar-orbiting natural things that are deemed planets, and some that are not. How would you draw the line?
The problem, as I understand it, is a shortage of more plausible lines. Suggest one.
Re: Significant figures
I think the geological processes that affect an object is a more plausible argument.
Asteroids and most moons are inert lumps of rock and other stuff. The planets that we call planets plus Pluto are the only objects we know of that are (a) not a satellite of a planet and (b) are or once were geologically active.
I think that would be a better basis than arbitrary maths that don't really mean anything.
Asteroids and most moons are inert lumps of rock and other stuff. The planets that we call planets plus Pluto are the only objects we know of that are (a) not a satellite of a planet and (b) are or once were geologically active.
I think that would be a better basis than arbitrary maths that don't really mean anything.
"The first duty of Port is to be red"
Ernest H. Cockburn
Ernest H. Cockburn
Re: Significant figures
The maths has meaning, but this also has merit. And problems.DRT wrote:I think the geological processes that affect an object is a more plausible argument.
Asteroids and most moons are inert lumps of rock and other stuff. The planets that we call planets plus Pluto are the only objects we know of that are (a) not a satellite of a planet and (b) are or once were geologically active.
I think that would be a better basis than arbitrary maths that don't really mean anything.
• Is Eris a planet? Under the DRT definition, the answer has to be ‘no idea’. And no prospect of having an idea for what might be ages. Ditto lots of others.
• If a planet is shattered in an impact, is every pieces of shrapnel (all which have been formed or shaped or changed by geological processes) then a planet?
Re: Significant figures
I imagine the meeting where a bunch of astronomers suddenly realized that Earth was no longer considered a planet, and so frantically changed the definition to "dominating" from "clearing" the neighborhood.jdaw1 wrote:I agree that the phrasing ‘clearing the neighbourhood’ is wrong. It should be ‘dominating the neighbourhood’.
"Planet" is a loaded term at this point. If gas giants and telluric objects can both be considered planets simply because they always have been, then there's no reason to create a "scientific" definition that explicitly excludes Pluto. Especially when said definition is explicitly restricted to our solar system. If Astronomers need such a definition (note: they clearly don't since the definition is restricted to our solar system, which isn't going to get any bigger during our lifetimes), they can use a different word. Feel free to make one up that everyone else can ignore.
Re: Eris - "we don't know yet" is a perfectly acceptable answer to "is Eris a planet?"
Further ramblings... what are all these things orbiting other stars? Can't use the IAU definition, so do we have to stop calling them planets? (Hint: yes. Which is dumb.)
Glenn Elliott
Re: Significant figures
I am defending the definition as it applies to our home. It should also apply to other solar systems, at least those with a single sun. Multiples, especially non-hierarchical multiples, might be weird.
Re: Significant figures
Or you might just be supporting the making it up as we go along theory. Well done.jdaw1 wrote:I am defending the definition as it applies to our home. It should also apply to other solar systems, at least those with a single sun. Multiples, especially non-hierarchical multiples, might be weird.
The Earth is not flat, and a planet has no scientifically meaningful definition.
Make it up from there.
"The first duty of Port is to be red"
Ernest H. Cockburn
Ernest H. Cockburn
Re: Significant figures
A particular planet does not, but the word ‘planet’ could.DRT wrote:and a planet has no scientifically meaningful definition.
Yes, sure. But in that case Pluto would not have been a planet until a few days ago. Is that what you want? Do you want there to have been only one planet until the space age?Glenn E. wrote:Re: Eris - "we don't know yet" is a perfectly acceptable answer to "is Eris a planet?"
Re: Significant figures
You extrapolate; I did not. I'm perfectly happy saying "our understanding of the solar system is evolving, so for the time being we cannot say for sure whether or not Eris should be considered a planet or some other type of solar object."jdaw1 wrote:Yes, sure. But in that case Pluto would not have been a planet until a few days ago. Is that what you want? Do you want there to have been only one planet until the space age?Glenn E. wrote:Re: Eris - "we don't know yet" is a perfectly acceptable answer to "is Eris a planet?"
I'm far from convinced that our evolving understanding of the solar system needs to have a new definition of a "planet" that seems to have been deliberately created to exclude Pluto. Please explain the need for this new definition before we argue whether or not it is correct. I see no need, ergo the question of whether or not it is correct is moot.
Glenn Elliott