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As seen from the Earth, the five planets from Mercury to Saturn are conspicuous naked-eye objects moving in looped paths against the stellar background. The sizes of these loops, which are caused by the Earth's own motion around the Sun, are inversely proportional to the planet's distance from the Earth. Planets do not produce light, but reflect the light of their parent star.
Recent discoveries
Scores of planets orbiting stars other than the Sun have been discovered. Confirmed detections were first made in the early 1990s. Since then planets have been discovered by a variety of methods. A large planet causes a wobble in the parent star's motion. A planet circling a pulsar may affect the timing of the pulsar's radio signals. A planet may pass between us and the parent star and dim its light. A few objects have been directly imaged though these are large, and may be brown dwarfs rather than planets. The objects discovered range in mass from brown-dwarf size (about 5-90 times the mass of Jupiter) to a few times the mass of the Earth.
In 2005, US astronomers announced the discovery of a candidate for the title of planet in our Solar System. They observed an object approximately 3,000 km/1,800 mi wide orbiting the Sun three times as far away as Pluto. It was the largest object to be found in the Solar System since Neptune was discovered in 1846. The object, later named Eris, was given the temporary designation 2003 UB313 (it was originally observed in 2003 but only confirmed as a planet in January 2005). The astronomers used telescopes at the Palomar Observatory, California and Mauna Kea, Hawaii to make their discovery.
In 2006, Pluto was reclassified from planet to dwarf planet, leaving eight planets in our Solar System.
Blue stands for peace. Red represents power and faith. Yellow stands for the church, peace, natural wealth, and love. Green symbolizes the land and hope. Effective date: 6 February 1996.
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