The past 15 years have brought about a revolution in our understanding of our Solar System and other planetary systems. During this time, discoveries include the first Kuiper Belt Objects, the first brown dwarfs, and the first extra-solar planets. Although discoveries continue apace, they have called into question our previous perspectives on planets, both here and elsewhere. The result has been a debate about the meaning of the word ''planet'' itself. It became clear that scientists do not have a widely accepted or clear definition of what a planet is, and both scientists and the public are confused (and sometimes annoyed) by its use in various contexts. Because ''planet'' is a very widely used term, it seems worth the attempt to resolve t...
The difference in formation process between binary stars and planetary systems is reflected in their...
This is a book on planets: Solar system planets and dwarf planets. And planets outside our solar sys...
A Note from the Author: On August 24, 2006, at the 26th General Assembly of the International Astron...
The past 15 years have brought about a revolution in our understanding of our Solar System and other...
The need for an explicit and exact definition of a planet has arise out of the growing rate of disco...
Cool objects found in young star clusters in Orion and Perseus, such as those reported by M. R. Zapa...
A planet is an end product of disk accretion around a primary star or substar. I quantify this defin...
We know a lot about stars and planets. We know about stars because they are easy to detect and beca...
In case you haven\u27t heard, Pluto isn\u27t a planet anymore (and maybe it never was). In grade sch...
The lowest mass object that Mother Nature makes through the process of “star formation” is currentl...
Planets: A Very Short Introduction demonstrates the excitement, uncertainties, and challenges faced ...
International audienceIn antiquity, all of the enduring celestial bodies that were seen to move rela...
Nearly 100 years ago, astronomers hypothesized that a large celestial object, nicknamed “Planet X,” ...
-Provides an overview of our Solar System and its origins, nature, and evolution -Considers contr...
International audienceThis contribution examines the formation, evolution and use of terms in astron...
The difference in formation process between binary stars and planetary systems is reflected in their...
This is a book on planets: Solar system planets and dwarf planets. And planets outside our solar sys...
A Note from the Author: On August 24, 2006, at the 26th General Assembly of the International Astron...
The past 15 years have brought about a revolution in our understanding of our Solar System and other...
The need for an explicit and exact definition of a planet has arise out of the growing rate of disco...
Cool objects found in young star clusters in Orion and Perseus, such as those reported by M. R. Zapa...
A planet is an end product of disk accretion around a primary star or substar. I quantify this defin...
We know a lot about stars and planets. We know about stars because they are easy to detect and beca...
In case you haven\u27t heard, Pluto isn\u27t a planet anymore (and maybe it never was). In grade sch...
The lowest mass object that Mother Nature makes through the process of “star formation” is currentl...
Planets: A Very Short Introduction demonstrates the excitement, uncertainties, and challenges faced ...
International audienceIn antiquity, all of the enduring celestial bodies that were seen to move rela...
Nearly 100 years ago, astronomers hypothesized that a large celestial object, nicknamed “Planet X,” ...
-Provides an overview of our Solar System and its origins, nature, and evolution -Considers contr...
International audienceThis contribution examines the formation, evolution and use of terms in astron...
The difference in formation process between binary stars and planetary systems is reflected in their...
This is a book on planets: Solar system planets and dwarf planets. And planets outside our solar sys...
A Note from the Author: On August 24, 2006, at the 26th General Assembly of the International Astron...