Every once in a while a science story comes along that absolutely astonishes me. Sometimes it astonishes me because it represents a giant advancement in human knowledge. And sometimes it astonishes me because it represents a giant gap in human knowledge…specifically, mine. Such a story is one I stumbled on this week, concerning Venetia Phair (née Burney), an 87-year-old retired teacher who lives in
What sets Venetia apart from other 87-year-old schoolteachers is that she’s the only person alive to have named one of the solar system’s nine planets: she came up with the name Pluto for the outermost planet when she was an 11-year-old schoolgirl in
In a January interview with Edward Goldstein of NASA Public Affairs, in honor of the then-impending launch of the New Horizons spacecraft, now en route to a 2015 fly-past of Pluto,
“I think it was on March 14, 1930, and I was having breakfast with my mother and my grandfather,” she said. “And my grandfather read out at breakfast the great news (of the discovery of Pluto) and said he wondered what it would be called. And for some reason, I after a short pause, said, ‘Why not call it Pluto?’”
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Of course, lots of children say things over the breakfast table that don’t make it onto a map of the heavens. Most children, however, don’t have as their grandfather Falconer Madan, a retired librarian of
Ironically, Turner wasn’t home: he was at a meeting of the Royal Astronomical Society in
When Turner finally heard the suggestion from Madan, he thought it was an excellent name for the new heavenly body. Turner sent a telegram to the Lowell Observatory in
The discoverers apparently liked the name not only because it was one of the few notable names from classical mythology that had yet to be used but also because the first two letters were the initials of the late Percival Lowell—after whom the Lowell Observatory was named, and who, along with William Pickering, had predicted the existence of a planet outside Neptune’s orbit, but never saw it.
Madan awarded
The launch of the New Horizons mission has probably gotten
In addition to the long-spent five-pound note from her grandfather, Venetia has received a badge from
It’s a great story, isn’t it? But perhaps I can be forgiven for not having heard of it until now.
As

