User:Arsia Mons/plutog
data from the New Horizons spacecraft. The International Astronomical Union has determined that the names for these features will be chosen from the following themes:[1]
- Names for the underworld from the world's mythologies.
- Gods, goddesses, and dwarfs associated with the underworld.
- Heroes and other explorers of the underworld.
- Writers associated with Pluto and the Kuiper belt.
- Scientists and engineers associated with Pluto and the Kuiper belt.
The following is a list of unofficial names chosen by the New Horizons team but not yet approved by the IAU.[2] Not all of the names correspond with the themes listed above.
Cavi
A cavus is a hollow or steep-sided depression. One cavus has been identified on Pluto thus far; it is named after a mythological underworld.
Feature | Named after |
---|---|
Quidlivun Cavus | The land on the Moon where the souls of the dead find rest in Inuit mythology |
Colles
Plutonian colles (ranges of low hills) are being named after spacecraft that operated in earth orbit.
Feature | Named after |
---|---|
Astrid Colles | The Astrid program, Sweden's first satellites |
Challenger Colles | Honours the loss of the Space Shuttle Challenger |
Coleta de Dados Colles | Satélite de Coleta de Dados, first Brazilian satellites |
Columbia Colles | Honours the loss of the Space Shuttle Columbia |
Soyuz Colles | The Soyuz program; honors the loss of Soyuz 11 |
Craters
Plutonian craters are being named after scientists associated with the study of Pluto.
Feature | Named after | Theme |
---|---|---|
Brinton | Henry Brinton, NASA administrator instrumental in Pluto studies | scientist |
Burney | Venetia Burney, who proposed the name of Pluto | — |
Coradini | Angioletta Coradini, Italian astronomer | scientist |
Drake | Michael Julian Drake, British-American astronomer who chaired the committee that approved the New Horizons mission | scientist |
Elliot | James L. Elliot, discoverer of Pluto's atmosphere | scientist |
Farinella | Paolo Farinella, Italian astronomer | scientist |
Giclas | Henry L. Giclas, an astronomer at Lowell Observatory | scientist |
Guest | John Guest,[3] British volcanologist and planetary scientist | scientist |
H. Smith | Harlan Smith, astronomer and director of McDonald Observatory | scientist |
Harrington | Robert Sutton Harrington, co-discoverer of Charon | scientist |
Hollis | Andrew J. Hollis, British astronomer | scientist |
K. Edgeworth | Kenneth Edgeworth, Irish astronomer who posited the Kuiper Belt | scientist |
Kowal | Charles T. Kowal, American astronomer who discovered the first centaur | scientist |
Oort | Jan Oort, Dutch astronomer who posited the Oort Cloud | scientist |
Pulfrich | Carl Pulfrich, German physicist who developed the blink-comparator used to discover Pluto | scientist |
Safronov | Viktor Safronov, Russian astronomer | scientist |
Simonelli | Damon Simonelli, American astronomer and Pluto geologist | scientist |
Dorsae
A dorsa is a ridge. Plutonian dorsae are being named after underworlds in mythology.
Feature | Named after |
---|---|
Pandemonium Dorsa | Pandæmonium, the capital of Hell in the poems of John Milton |
Tartarus Dorsa | Tartarus, the pit of hell in Greek mythology |
Fossae
A fossa is a ditch-like feature. Plutonian fossae are being named after figures associated with underworld myths.
Feature | Named after |
---|---|
Beatrice Fossa | Beatrice Portinari, Purgatory to Heaven in The Divine Comedy |
Djanggawul Fossae | Djanggawul, Yolngu creation figures from the Island of the Dead |
Dumuzi Fossa | Dumuzid, legendary Sumerian king who replaced his wife Inanna in the underworld |
Inanna Fossa | Inanna, Sumerian queen who descended to the underworld |
Sleipnir Fossa | Sleipnir, the steed Odin rides to the underworld |
Sun Wukong Fossa | Sun Wukong, the Chinese Monkey King who went to Hell |
Virgil Fossa | Virgil, as Dante's guide through Hell and Purgatory in The Divine Comedy |
Maculae
A macula is a dark spot. Plutonian maculae are being named after underworld creatures from fiction and mythology.
Feature | Named after |
---|---|
Ala Macula | Ala, an Igbo god of the underworld |
Balrog Macula | balrog, an underground demon in the writings of J.R.R. Tolkien |
Cadejo Macula | cadejo, from Central American folklore |
Hun-Came Macula | One of the two leading Maya death gods from the Popol Vuh |
Krun Macula | Krun, the Mandaean overlord of the underworld |
Meng-p'o Macula | Meng Po, the Chinese goddess of forgetfulness after death |
Morgoth Macula | Morgoth, a figure of evil in the writings of J.R.R. Tolkien |
Vucub-Came Macula | One of the two leading Maya death gods from the Popol Vuh |
Lineae
A linea is an elongated marking. Plutonian lineae are being named after space probes.
Feature | Named after |
---|---|
Chandrayaan Linea | the Chandrayaan program, India's first lunar probes |
Luna Linea | the Luna program, the first spacecraft to visit the Moon |
Yutu Linea | Yutu, the first Chinese lunar rover |
Montes
A mons is a mountain. Plutonian montes (mountain ranges) are being named after explorers and adventurers.
Feature | Named after |
---|---|
al-Idrisi Montes | Muhammad al-Idrisi, medieval Almoravid explorer |
Baré Montes | Jeanne Baré, first woman to circumnavigate the Earth |
Hillary Montes | Edmund Hillary, first to scale Mount Everest (with Tenzing Norgay) |
Norgay Montes | Tenzing Norgay, first to scale Mount Everest (with Edmund Hillary) |
Zheng He Montes | Zheng He, medieval Chinese explorer |
Plana
A planum is a plateau or high plain. Only one has been identified thus far on Pluto; it is named after a space probe.
Feature | Named after |
---|---|
Sputnik Planum | Sputnik 1, the first satellite to orbit the Earth |
Regiones
A regio is a region geographically distinct from its surroundings. Plutonian regiones are being named after underworld spirits in fiction and mythology, or after scientists associated with the study of Pluto.
Feature | Named after |
---|---|
Cthulhu Regio | Cthulhu, an ancient underworld deity in the writings of H.P. Lovecraft |
Lowell Regio | Percival Lowell, whose ideas about Planet X inadvertently led to Pluto's discovery |
Tombaugh Regio | Clyde Tombaugh, discoverer of Pluto |
Rupēs
A rupes in an escarpment. Plutonian rupēs are being named after explorers.
Feature | Named after |
---|---|
Cousteau Rupes | Jacques Cousteau, undersea explorer |
Eriksson Rupes | Leif Erikson, first Norse explorer of America |
Terrae
A terra is an extensive landmass. Plutonian terrae are being named after space probes.
Feature | Named after |
---|---|
Hayabusa Terra | Hayabusa, the first spacecraft to return a sample of an asteroid |
Pioneer Terra | the Pioneer program, the first spacecraft to explore the outer Solar System |
Venera Terra | the Venera program, first landers on Venus |
Viking Terra | the Viking program, landers on Mars |
Voyager Terra | the Voyager program, the first probes to Uranus, Neptune and interstellar space |
Valley
A vallis is a valley. One valley on Pluto has been identified thus far; it is named after an explorer.
Feature | Named after |
---|---|
Kupe Vallis | Kupe, legendary discoverer of New Zealand |
See also
References
- ^ The geological features on Pluto are being identified by scientists working with Naming of Astronomical Objects, by UAI
- ^ [1]
- ^ https://www.geolsoc.org.uk/About/History/Obituaries-2001-onwards/Obituaries-2012/John-Edward-Guest