Official names for 2003 UB313 and moon

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Official names for 2003 UB313 and moon

Post #1by granthutchison » 13.09.2006, 23:31

At last an end to "Xena" and "Gabrielle" :)
These bodies are now officially Eris and Dysnomia, according to IAUC 8747.

Get the updated version of outersys.ssc from the CVS tree:
http://celestia.cvs.sourceforge.net/celestia/celestia/data/outersys.ssc

Grant

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Post #2by granthutchison » 13.09.2006, 23:41

The goddess of discord.
Very appropriate given the chaos that has reigned since its discovery. :)

Grant

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Post #3by ElChristou » 14.09.2006, 00:02

Good news!!
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Post #4by Malenfant » 14.09.2006, 00:12

Eris?! Oh man, the Discordians are gonna love that!! :lol:

Hail Eris!!!
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Post #5by buggs_moran » 14.09.2006, 02:15

See, it was all a plot to have more planets named after women. Venus, Ceres, and now Eris, well and Earth, not masculine as Gaia or Hera. That would have been 4 out of 12...

Okay, just kidding, don't take me seriously.
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Post #6by eburacum45 » 14.09.2006, 15:00

Fnord.

After all the controversy surrounding this planet I think Eris is very appropriate.
What does Dysnomia mean?
Lawlessness.

Hmm; I will be interested to see what name they come up with for the even more controversial 2003 EL61

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Post #7by granthutchison » 14.09.2006, 15:07

eburacum45 wrote:What does Dysnomia mean?
In medicine, it's the condition of not being able to recall names.
Seems more appropriate for some of the outer Saturnian satellites, if you ask me ...

Grant

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Post #8by eburacum45 » 14.09.2006, 15:16

I am familiar with the conditions dyspraxia and dyslexia; I expected dysnomia to mean namelessness rather than lawlessness. This moon had been nameless for some time, after all.

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Post #9by ajtribick » 14.09.2006, 15:38

eburacum45 wrote:Fnord.

After all the controversy surrounding this planet I think Eris is very appropriate.
What does Dysnomia mean?
Lawlessness.

Hmm; I will be interested to see what name they come up with for the even more controversial 2003 EL61


Ah well, a good bout of lawlessness to cure the lucylawlesslessness...

hmm...

(sorry, a pun that atrocious, I couldn't resist...)
Last edited by ajtribick on 14.09.2006, 16:42, edited 1 time in total.


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Post #11by granthutchison » 16.09.2006, 12:53

eburacum45 wrote:I am familiar with the conditions dyspraxia and dyslexia; I expected dysnomia to mean namelessness rather than lawlessness. This moon had been nameless for some time, after all.
You can see the relationship to laws in the English words eunomy ("a political condition of good laws, well administered"), anomy ("disregard for law") and the French anomie, which is more of a personal lack of values.
It's only happenstance, I think, that dysnomia has been purloined by the medical community: names are stored in a different bit of your brain from other words, so it's possible for a stroke to damage the "naming" part but not the other areas of speech. A word was needed for that condition.

But another possible meaning for dysnomia would be "a difficult naming", which certainly applies here ... :)

Grant

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Post #12by eburacum45 » 18.09.2006, 02:17

And nomos pops up in the word astronomy as well, apparently.
astronomia = astron + nomos, literally, "law of the stars"
(from wiki)

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Post #13by granthutchison » 18.09.2006, 12:33

More standard sources, like the Oxford English Dictionary, tend to give the translation of astronomos as "star-arranging" or "star-classification". Which fills in the logical connection between the meanings "name" and "law".

Grant


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