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Our Moon Could Become a Planet

anthemaniac writes "Earth's moon is drifting away from us more than an inch every year. In a few billion years, if the system survives, the moon would be reclassified as a planet under the new IAU definition. You gotta wonder if the astronomers who dreamed this definition up had thought of that."

3 of 438 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Gosh. How shocking. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Wrong, wrong, wrong! Just RTFA. The moon does not have to escape the Earth's gravitational pull in order to be re-classified as a planet. The only thing that would be necessary (according to the new definition of a planet) is that the Moon moves further away from the Earth, just enough so that the barycenter of the Earth-Moon system is above the surface of the Earth. The Moon would still orbit the Earth. Obviously, the moderators who gave a +5 Insightful to your comment have not read the article either.

  2. Re:In a few billion years... by durgaprasad_j · · Score: 5, Informative

    In about 5 billion years, when the Sun is a red giant, it will be so large that it will consume Mercury and Venus. Models predict that the Sun will expand out to about 99% of the distance to the Earth's present orbit (1 astronomical unit, or AU). However by that time the orbit of the Earth will expand to about 1.7 AUs due to mass loss by the Sun. Our planet will thus escape envelopment. -- Reference http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star

  3. Re:Do the math... by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 5, Informative

    Consider 2 bodies of equal mass seperated by a distance of X.
    The Centre of mass is right in the centre of the space between them.

    The distance X increases by 1 unit, does the centre of mass also increase by 1 unit?

    Adjust this equation to put it into earth/lunar context and you will understand why scientists don't just "google the math".

    --
    liqbase :: faster than paper