The Nerds Win! Plutonian Moons Have Been Named
First the SETI Institute put it up for vote, then the geeks and nerds swarmed the Internet, and now it’s as certain as it can be before the International Astronomical Union (IAU) makes the final call: The names of last two moons of Pluto have been chosen, courtesy of 450,324 votes and William Shatner. And the Plutonian award goes to….
- Vulcan, Roman god of fire and the forge, who sometimes said to be one of the sons of Pluto (but also of Jupiter, so…yeah). Vulcan — oh so coincidentally — is both race and planet in the Star Trek universe.
- Kerberos, multi-headed hound and guardian of the underworld. The Roman name is actually Cerberus, which was the second choice in the SETI poll, but that name had already been assigned to an asteroid discovered in 1971.
On February 11th, William Shatner used Twitter to ask fans if they’d join him in voting for the names Vulcan and Romulus. The latter was thrown out, but Vulcan was approved and won by a landslide by the time the polls closed. Technically, none of this is finalized yet. SETI senior scientist Mark Showalter will next submit the two candidates to the IAU, and that approval process will take 1 to 2 months.
I was hoping for Styx and Lethe, the underworld rivers of invulnerability and forgetfulness. I totally lost to the nerds.
(Universe Today, images courtesy of Wikipedia: Pluto and Vulcan, quimby on Flickr).
- Pluto’s not a planet, but you could have named its moons
- William Shatner calls on fans for Pluto moon naming
- Pluto was discovered in 1930 by this guy
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