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Archive 1Archive 2

Stars

There seems to be some inconsistency with Alpheratz directing to Alpha Andromedae but Alpha Geminorum redirecting to Castor (star).

I suggest that where stars have common names like Castor, Alpheratz, Acrux, the article should be under that name and the reference name (Alpha Geminorum etc) should be a redirect. AndrewRT - Talk 23:55, 20 August 2006 (UTC)

Looking at a few Messier names, it appears we prefer common names to catalog designations when they exist. I suggest using a proper name if it is approved by the IAU and Bayer designation otherwise (or a more obscure designation if no Bayer designation exists). See also Astronomical naming conventions.--Todd 00:36, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
For both stars and galaxies, I believe we should use the most commonly used name. For example, we shouldn't move Alpha Centauri to Rigel Kentaurus because the first name has 1.9 million Google hits, whereas the second name has only 15,000. Alpheratz is more common than Alpha Andromedae (191,000 hits compared to 707), so I agree with moving it. I think we should employ a similar rule for galaxies. Keep Andromeda Galaxy rather than moving it to Messier 31 (1.6 million hits for Andromeda Galaxy versus 466,000 hits for M31 galaxy), but move Triangulum Galaxy to Messier 33 (217,000 hits for M33 galaxy versus 88,000 hits for Triangulum Galaxy). --Fournax 01:02, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
I argee with the system suggested by Fournax, whereby the star is placed under its most common name. The brightest stars would generally be given their Greek or Arabic names, and the fainter stars would be given Bayesian names. For stars that are not named in the Bayesian system, I suggest using the HD number.George J. Bendo 08:15, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
I agree with the idea of using the HD number where available. That seems to have become almost a convention in recent AJ and ApJ papers. By trial and error I've found that google searches on a star (that doesn't have a common name or Bayer designation) is most likely to succeed in finding useful results when the HD name is used. HR numbers have a particular problem in that they often match pieces of legislation. Gl/GJ/BD/CD identifiers usually seem to be more useful with older materials. — RJH (talk) 14:25, 21 August 2006 (UTC)

Thanks everyone for their contributions. I'd like to propose:

The golden rule is that the most commonly used name is used. In general:

  1. Traditional name where approved by IAU and this is more widely used than the Bayer name
  2. Bayer designation
  3. Flamsteed designation
  4. Henry Draper Catalogue
  5. If no HD number that alternative name

-AndrewRT - Talk 19:31, 29 August 2006 (UTC)

A few clarifications: we should probably specify Greek letter Bayer designations, since the Roman-letter ones are rarely used, and lower-case Roman-letter Bayer designations cause problems anyway (especially where there exists an upper-case Roman-letter designation for the same letter!). In addition, we should probably specify "most commonly used name" after Flamsteed (note that in the scientific literature, the most commonly used name is the HD name even for many stars with Bayer or Flamsteed designations). Remember variable stars! Chaos syndrome 21:36, 14 September 2006 (UTC)

All Bayer letter are lower-case Greek letters. The Roman upper and lower-case letters were added later by several authors. There should be no confusion with official naming conventions--e.g., variable stars start with the capital R. This was done deliberately because none of the constellations went as far as R in their assignments. These Roman letters, I think, should be used before HD numbers since they were assigned before that catalogue,i.e., many years ago. Tradition, mind you, and just about every substantial atlas uses them.Mytg8 17:31, 15 September 2006 (UTC)
Mytg8 is right, even if his name is incomprehensible. Many stars are well-known by Bayer designations that include Roman letters. RR Lyrae is the best example, but many more exist. George J. Bendo 09:49, 16 September 2006 (UTC)
RR Lyrae is a variable star designation, not a Roman letter Bayer designation. I'm also not going to go and quibble whether the Roman letter designations are or are not Bayer designations, but since some authors seem to refer to them as Bayer designations, I think clarification is needed. The problems come when you get stars like q1 Eridani, which would be rendered in the article title as Q1 Eridani, which is incorrect. In general, the Roman letter designations are obscure, so I think they should be avoided. Variable star designations are another matter. Chaos syndrome 21:08, 17 September 2006 (UTC)
RR Lyrae is the name of a star which is the achetype for the RR Lyrae variable stars. As you can see, Wikipedia contains entries on both the star and the class of stars. RR Lyrae is not the only such example; see U Geminorum for example (although it is also the archetype for a class of variable stars). I can find more given time. These are stars that will first be searched for by the designations that I gave above. The naming policy should take that into account. However, I do understand the problem that you have mentioned with the q1 Eridani. Perhaps the naming conventions can be adjusted for both situations? George J. Bendo 21:22, 17 September 2006 (UTC)
I'll throw in some more problematic cases: HD 209458 vs V376 Pegasi. By the logic we're developing here, the article should be at the latter. However, the HD designation is overwhelmingly more common. In addition, consider 55 Cancri vs Rho1 Cancri. The Flamsteed designation is far more common than the Bayer designation in this case! Chaos syndrome 17:19, 18 September 2006 (UTC)
Let's see(dusting off naming convention notes). Bayer letters are Greek from his "Uranometria" of 1603. Later other astronomers assigned Roman letters especially in southern constellations that Bayer and Lalande left bare(a,b...,A,B... no j's). So I suppose you could call both--Greek and Roman--Bayer letters. Later variable star namers noticed that no constellation went as far as R and used this fact to start naming variables(R,S,T...Z, then RR,RS...ZZ; then AA,AB...QZ for a total of 334 names). When they ran out of these, they started with V335, V336,etc. So you would know that P Cygni or p Eridani was a letter designation, and e.g., S Doradus was a variable; or V376 Pegasi or RR Lyr or V4021 Sgr. All these variable names are official and are tallied by B.V. Kukarkin of Moscow and his "General Catalogue of Variable Stars" and supplements. IMO variable names should be used(if assigned) after Bayer letters but before HD; no dis to Henry Draper, who bankrolled that survey back in the early 20th century. :-) Mytg8 13:11, 19 September 2006 (UTC)
Do you have a reference for this information? I am unfamiliar with this convention (although I can believe that it exists). Maybe it should be included somewhere in Wikipedia (with references). George J. Bendo 13:16, 19 September 2006 (UTC)
A quick google-http://www.aavso.org/vstar/naming.shtml Since this is apparently sanctioned by the IAU, I would think it's preferred; say in the case above--HD 209458 is a number in a catalog, V376 Pegasi is an official designation in the eyes of the IAU. Again, my opinion, I think that stars named after someone should be limited in use, especially since it could be argued that the feebliest brown dwarf is greater than all of us.  :-) Mytg8 15:30, 19 September 2006 (UTC)
Also HO Librae versus Gliese 581, IL Aquarii versus Gliese 876 (to continue my theme of taking exoplanet host stars). We have another two situations in which the variable star designation is hardly ever used, versus the catalogue number. Hell, even the news articles used the Gliese number. IMHO variable star designations should only be used if well-known. Chaos syndrome 13:28, 20 September 2006 (UTC)
Further point here: the IAU involvement in the variable star designations is because the system is still being updated as further variable stars are discovered. The HD catalogue etc are not being further updated, so do not need direct IAU involvement: this is not taken to mean the IAU is saying that the variable star designation should be used. This situation contrasts with solar system objects, where there is only one designation. Chaos syndrome 14:50, 20 September 2006 (UTC)

Yes, no doubt that a lot of astronomers use Gliese's(updated continually) CNS catalogs; the late Dr. Gliese being one himself and it being on file at SIMBAD. Especially for dim and nearby stars. Here's an alternative pecking order-

  1. Traditional names
  2. Bayer letters
  3. Flamsteed numbers
  4. Harvard Revised catalog Commonly known as HR xxxx. Well known with data on the 9 000 plus brightest stars. The HD and HDE catalogs, when they are used, are for the dimmer and therefore probably lesser known stars.
  5. Gliese Catalogue of Nearby Stars Popular with stellar astronomers.

Mytg8 16:14, 20 September 2006 (UTC)

I disagree that we should be specifying preferential order of catalogues. Once we get to the catalogue number stage, we should be using most common reference, be it HD, HR, Gliese or whatever. Chaos syndrome 19:13, 20 September 2006 (UTC)
Interesting to see 58 Cancri redirects to Rho-2 Cancri whereas Rho1 Cancri redirects to 55 Cancri! The question is do we have a system that says the most common form always takes precedence or do we say Bayer always takes precedence over Flamsteed? AndrewRT - Talk 18:28, 18 September 2006 (UTC)

In general, I'd put proper name, Greek letter Bayer designation and Flamsteed designation on the same level of the pecking order (i.e. choose the most commonly used out of each one). If none of those exist, go for most commonly used designation (e.g. variable star designation, HD number). Chaos syndrome 18:41, 18 September 2006 (UTC)

In the galaxies naming conventions section, I wrote in what I now think of as the "Arp 220" rule (specifically designed for Arp 220). According to this rule, any exotic catalog designation that is in very common use for a specific object is more desirable than the more orthodox IC or UGC designations. Maybe something similar is needed for stars (although it is much harder to write for stars). George J. Bendo 19:18, 18 September 2006 (UTC)

How about this:

  1. Traditional name if commonly used. I'll propose as a diagnostic that a name is "commonly used" if it is defined in SIMBAD.
  2. Most commonly used out of Greek-letter Bayer designation or Flamsteed designation. This can be ascertained by searching (e.g. Google, ADS, arXiv)
  3. Most commonly used designation. This can be ascertained by searching.

This gets around the problem that a simple "most commonly used" would end up giving us lots of HD numbers, but gets around the issue of ending up with obscure catalogue or variable star designations which would result from prescribing a preferred order of catalogues. Chaos syndrome 21:52, 20 September 2006 (UTC)

I guess you can sum up the options like this: At one extreme, all designation systems are treated as equal and you simply use the most common name whichever designation it's from; at the other end you have a strict heirarchy and you always use (for instance) Bayer in preference to Flamsteed where the object has a Bayer name. The advantage of the second approach is that articles are then in a predictable place and this convention is useful way of preventing lots of pointless disputes about article names (like the one currently at 136199 Eris). I would like to propose a middle way - a presumed preference (perhaps Common Name then Bayer then Flamsteed then HD/HR/Gliese/Other) which can be overriden where a star is clearly more commonly known by a difference name. The same principle can be adopted throughout for other types of astronomical object AndrewRT - Talk 21:54, 20 September 2006 (UTC)
With the use of Bayer designations we have a problem with lowercase latin characters... 132.205.44.134 00:52, 21 September 2006 (UTC)

Solar System bodies

Just to get the ball rolling I'll offer a suggestion for sub-stellar bodies (planets, dwarf planets, and SSSB's).

  1. Common name if widely used and not subject to significant disambiguation problems
  2. Official name (subject to subscript issues with preliminary minor-planet designations)
  3. parenthetically disambiguated name if official name is uncertain, unclear, or unusable

Under this system the major planets will be at juat plain Mars e.g. since they are considered more prominent than the Roman gods and other uses of the name, but dwarf planets and SSSB's will generally be at their official name, either preliminary as 2004 VD17 or final with minor planet number such as 1 Ceres since that provides convient disambiguation from the namesake and the first sentence makes clear that we are dealing with the astronomical object. See Wikipedia:Disambiguation#Specific topic number 1 for the rational for using a more complete name rather than parentheses to disambiguate. Eluchil404 21:47, 14 September 2006 (UTC)

Referencing external sources

Can we write recommendations suggesting that users can look at SIMBAD or the NASA/IPAC Extragalactic Database for accepted astronomical names? George J. Bendo 22:32, 14 September 2006 (UTC)

I don't see why not, although we shouldn't let other people's naming decisions predetermine the names we use. AndrewRT - Talk 19:07, 17 September 2006 (UTC)
I see that I failed to explain the context of my statement. The current draft says to use the "traditional name where approved by International Astronomical Union" for various objects. I am unaware of how to obtain this informaton from the IAU website itself (although I would be grateful if someone could inform me how to do so). The NASA/IPAC Extragalactic Database (NED) and SIMBAD are both the best professional references for checking accepted object designations. I think the IAU even archives some of its official designations for things such as constellations with the same organization that operates the SIMBAD website. This is why I suggest referring to NED and SIMBAD. Does this make sense now? George J. Bendo 21:33, 17 September 2006 (UTC)
Thanks or clarifying and good point. The only to be careful about is that even if a common name exists, this policy (in its current form) says we should only use it if it is more commonly used that the Bayer designation. For instance Rigel Kentaurus should still be at Alpha Centauri as this is the most common form. AndrewRT - Talk 18:33, 18 September 2006 (UTC)
I've changes the project page - is this what you had in mind? I'm not familiar with the sources and wondered if they needed a bit more explanation? AndrewRT - Talk 18:38, 18 September 2006 (UTC)
I would recommend that NED and SIMBAD be generally used to check the possible traditional and catalog names for for anything outside the solar system (instead of simply stars). I will write something to that effect in the "General guidelines" section.

Numbers and names

I think there's a general principle that we should agree that applies to stars, comets, asteroids etc. In many cases they are given both numbers and names e..g. 4 Vesta and 136199 Eris.

The Wikipedia:Naming conventions policy states:

article naming should give priority to what the majority of English speakers would most easily recognize, with a reasonable minimum of ambiguity

A google search for Asteroid 4 Vesta [1] is instructive: Ignoring the wikipedia entry the search gives references to both 4 Vesta and Vesta but more to 4 Vesta. Searching for Vesta on its own shows the same in reverse - both coming up but Vesta more frequently.

On the other hand the top 20 search results for Eris only showed one result that included the name (of the results that related to the dwarf planet. I imagine this is connected to the recent publicity which means that many non-astronomers are using the name rather than professionals. This comes back to the WP:NAME policy, whcih also says:

Names of Wikipedia articles should be optimized for ... a general audience over specialists

The other issue is that most astronomical objects are named after other things, e.g. mythical gods. Hence Vesta, Eris, Pluto and Mercury also have other non-astronomical meanings.

4 Vesta is a less ambiguous name that Vesta because it clearly relates to the asteroid. An alternative is to have Vesta (Asteroid) which is the format the German wikipedia uses [2]

My preference would be to copy the German style for all astronomical objects. I dont think that numbers are often used by non-specialists. AndrewRT - Talk 20:00, 17 September 2006 (UTC)

I think the issue comes down to one of how we disambiguate. Given that most asteroids are named after mythological characters who are equally obscure, it comes down to disambiguating the name. From Wikipedia:Disambiguation, "# When there is another word (such as Cheque instead of Check) or more complete name that is equally clear (such as Titan rocket), that should be used." Since the number exists and functions as disambiguation, we should probably use that before resorting to parentheses. Chaos syndrome 21:12, 17 September 2006 (UTC)
Objects such as 4 Vesta are going to require disambiguation links on the Vesta page regardless of the name used (as is the case for this example). As a non-planetary scientist, I would look up this object on Wikipedia using the name "Vesta" (especially since I cannot remember its number). As to the names of these objects themselves, I am unclear as to which path to take. About half of the scientific articles on the ADS Abstract Service list this object being referred to as "Vesta", with the other half calling it "4 Vesta". Amateur astronomers and the general public probably refer to this as "Vesta". I would prefer using "Vesta (asteroid)", but I would give little resistance if people disagree with me. An option would be to create a redirect from "Vesta (asteroid)" to "4 Vesta".George J. Bendo 21:45, 17 September 2006 (UTC)
A point to bear in mind here is that several objects are currently under consideration for dwarf planet status. And once that happens we have to move the articles and fix the redirects if we have (centaur), (kuiper belt object), (cubewano), (asteroid) at the end. In addition, going to the brackets at the end form is going to raise merry hell when you consider the number of conflicting and overlapping terms for trans-Neptunian objects! Chaos syndrome 18:49, 18 September 2006 (UTC)
Another poster pointed out that there are 2 asteroids called Romulus, so Romulus (asteroid) is ambiguous. Similarly the last point, objects in the Kuiper Belt are generally not called asteroids - so name (asteroid) is not correct. name (astronomy) is possible - but there are two objects called Europa - so Europa (astronomy) is ambiguous. So to go with this proposal over mpc numbers raises multiple parenthesised suffixes for objects, and if we go for consistency and use the same suffix - it raises the possibility of ambiguity. Using the minor planet numbers removes any ambiguity, and disambiguates these minor planets from other objects which share the same or similar names - and we can be consistent with all numbered minor planets. Richard B 20:27, 18 September 2006 (UTC)

Galaxy group/cluster names

(This is also posted at Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Astronomical objects.)

I just wanted to ask about naming groups and clusters of galaxies. The current convention seems to have been developed by HurricaneDevon, who seems to have used the convention applied by Astronomy & Astrophysics (where the word "group" or "cluster" is not capitalized). Recently, I began converting articles to the Astrophysical Journal/Astronomical Journal convention (where "group" and "cluster" are capitalized). Today, I double checked the ADS Abstract Service and discovered that the two conventions exist.

This leads to an issue of what people's opinions are on naming groups and clusters of galaxies. My personal preference is to treat them like proper nouns and to capitalize "group" and "cluster". After all, all words are capitalized for other place names that are proper nouns (such as "City" in "New York City", "Lake" in "Lake Superior", and "Mountains" in "Rocky Mountains"). Does anyone else have any comments before I make further changes? George J. Bendo 21:50, 17 September 2006 (UTC)

Personally (as a non-astronomer who knows little of these things if I'm honest) I would prefer to capitalise as I would see "Cluster" as being part of the name. AndrewRT - Talk 18:31, 18 September 2006 (UTC)

Comets

If we use X/ P/ etc...

What about various articles we have on "Great Comet of xxx" (where xxx is a year)? It would look stupid to do X/Great Comet of 9999BC or what have you. 132.205.44.134 00:50, 21 September 2006 (UTC)

The symbol "/" is discouraged - but not prohibited from article names for technical reasons (it thinks it's a subpage)(see Wikipedia:Naming_conventions_(technical_restrictions)#Forward_slash) Is there any alternative naming convention we could use instead? AndrewRT - Talk 21:06, 21 September 2006 (UTC)


"For extremely famous comets which have no issues with disambiguation, these should be titled "Comet <name>", e.g. Comet Halley." - so how come the article on Comet Halley is titled "Halley's Comet"? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 109.77.234.42 (talk) 13:35, 22 June 2011 (UTC)

You can find an explanation at Talk:Halley's_Comet#Naming. --Enric Naval (talk) 22:20, 27 August 2011 (UTC)

Dwarf Planets

I just became aware of this proposed guideline. I would like to inform people that the issue of dwarf planet article naming was discussed as talk:Dwarf planet/Naming. The conclusion reached was that dwarf planets articles should have a title which is either be the name of the object or the name with a suffix of (dwarf planet) when disambiguation is needed. This standard is intended to supercede the minor planet naming standard for the dwarf planets. So Ceres should be Ceres (dwarf planet) under this decision, not 1 Ceres or (1) Ceres. I hope that the propsed standards here will be refined accordingly. --EMS | Talk 20:22, 10 October 2006 (UTC)

That talk page is long, and it contains a lot of contradictory discussion. Could you please indicate where in that talk page everyone reaches a consensus on naming dwarf planets? George J. Bendo 21:15, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
Also, that talk page archive contains about 4 polls (all in the last 3 weeks) over the subject which did not reach any consensus. I would also ask what EMS is hoping that we refine on this page - it currently says "{tbc}". Richard B 22:46, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
A 2:1 supermajority was reached favoring the "(dwarf planet)" suffix. Admitedly it is not a discussion consensus, but it is compelling evidence that the community will support the use of the suffix for Ceres (as is now happenning) and most likely for all future dwarf planets. If you want to see a discussion consensus, then all that I can say is "good luck", as there are too many strong opinions on this one. IMO the best thing to do is to take this decision and run with it. This is one of those times when what you decide isn't as important as that you decide. If this choice is bad, that will become obvious soon enough and the community will change course as a result. Otherwise, it will stick around and be built on. --EMS | Talk 04:07, 11 October 2006 (UTC)

I do not think that everyone has accepted the dwarf planet naming debate. I therefore doubt that whatever you write is official Wikipedia policy. Regardless, I think at this point that someone needs to contact an official body (the IAU, the Minor Planet Center, etc.) to get information on official naming conventions. George J. Bendo 08:41, 11 October 2006 (UTC)

Wikipedia doesn't HAVE to, and shouldn't in this case, use an organisation official naming conventions. In my eyes, the dwarf planet discussion is closed. We have been over and over and over this a million times, and most of the times, the consensus was **** (dwarf planet). Let's just move on and focus on something else. --Deenoe 10:08, 12 October 2006 (UTC)

Agreed! Please comment on my discussion below at the end of this page. Hopquick 17:23, 13 October 2006 (UTC)

Common vs. official names

The proposal currently seems written from the perspective of someone with the misconception that the "number name" construct is an official name. However, It is not a name, official or otherwise. "4 Vesta" is not the official name of the asteroid "Vesta". In fact, the vast majority of asteroids will have the same common name as official name.

What is being proposed is that asteroids should be given a special disambiguation system where the article titles will be "[MPC catalog number] [name]" in contrast to the most common Wikpedia disambiguation of "Name (category)". I don't think it's a good idea, though. Juno (asteroid) is better than 3 Juno. Already, the current practice of "number name" has lead many folks to believe that that is how asteriods are named, as evidenced at Talk:1_Ceres#Survey. When the policy is leading people to adopt misinformation, Wikipedia shouldn't be using it. People don't get as confused by the "Name (category)" titles. --Yath 23:48, 10 October 2006 (UTC)

I did not understand this comment. When I go to the ADS Abstracts Query Form and do a title search on "4 Vesta", I find a lot of scientific articles from journals such as Icarus and Astronomy & Astrophysics that identify this object as "4 Vesta" or "(4) Vesta". Do you mean to tell me that "4 Vesta" is not being used as a name by these scientific journals? George J. Bendo 08:22, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
4 Vesta is a scientific term, not a common-name. Scientific terms are used in scientific papers, I grant you that, but that does not make them the name. aLii 08:46, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
"4 Vesta" is not being used as a name by the scientific journals. This is a citation form. The official name is Vesta, and the number is the official designation in the Minor Planet Catalogue. --Cuddlyopedia 14:50, 12 October 2006.
Could you explain what a "citation form" is? I never have to use "citation forms" when I publish papers on galaxies. George J. Bendo 15:05, 12 October 2006 (UTC)
A 'citation form' is an agreed or specified format for the giving of citations. All Journals have these (usually in a 'note for contributors' or similar, though they may just refer to citation forms set by other bodies - such as the IAU), and when referring to a specific galaxy you presumably normally cite its entry in some catalogue or other, with the entry given in a specified format. The usual citation form for minor planets is '(designation) name'. --Cuddlyopedia 15:35, 12 October 2006 (UTC)
At this point, I have to speak as a professional astronomer who has published journal articles (see this one, for example). What Cuddlyopedia is talking about does not make sense. The designations for stars, nebulae, clusters, galaxies, etc. that include catalog numbers are properly referred to as names, designations, or (as SIMBAD calls them) identifiers, not "citation forms". The NASA/IPAC Extragalactic Database even refers to catalog names as "names". (Try a search at SIMBAD or the NASA/IPAC Extragalactic Database on something like "NGC 5676".) In astronomical journals, the word "citation" is used to discuss references (usually other journal articles). A professional astronomer would be far more likely to think that a "citation form" is the format for writing a reference in a publication, not the name for an object.
I am still left with the impression that inclusion of a number in an asteroid's name (e.g. "4 Vesta") can be used as an object's official name. Yath's statements to the contrary do not make sense. aLii and Cuddlyopedia have simply used semantics to make it sound as though names like "4 Vesta" are not names (i.e. they call such names "scientific terms" or "citation forms").
I still suggest that someone email the Minor Planet Center, the Icarus publication office, or the Astronomy and Astrophysics publication office for information on the inclusion of numbers in asteroid names rather than guessing at the convention used in professional astronomy. George J. Bendo 16:23, 12 October 2006 (UTC)
Despite all of this, I am still willing to support the move to name asteroids in Wikipedia without using the number if that is going to make Wikipedia more user friendly. However, I think other people need to talk to planetary scientists or professional organizations to get valid information.
(I think this is all I can stomach of this discussion. I hate semantics arguments.) George J. Bendo 16:23, 12 October 2006 (UTC)
A 'citation form' can be a name or a designation, if the format of same is specified. The term 'citation form' is used outside astronomy. Try entering it in an Internet search engine, or consider this example from law: [3]. I don't know what the position is for 'stars, nebulae, clusters and galaxies', but for minor planets the IAU specifies differences between designations and names (see [4], [5] and [6]). At your suggestion, I have today emailed the IAU for clarification and confirmation (the MPC states it has no resources to answer such questions). But, I'm just a member of the public and am not hopeful of getting a response. --Cuddlyopedia 06:50, 13 October 2006 (UTC)
OK, I no longer think people are just full of hot air (to put it mildly). However, after looking at the law example, I think Cuddlyopedia is mistaken as to his understanding of citation forms in astronomy. The law example demonstrates that other documents, not physical objects, are referenced using citation forms. The equivalent in astronomy would be to reference a journal paper (e.g. "Bendo et al.(2006)" to reference my NGC 4594 paper). What is under discussion here are object names. Take "NGC 5005" as an example. While using "NGC" may reference the New Galactic Catalogue, the designation itself is efectively a name.
On the topic of asteroids, the question remains whether the number is part of the name or not. I am happy that Cuddlyopedia is doing this. George J. Bendo 12:15, 16 October 2006 (UTC)

My opinion in a nutshell

Astronomical Objects articles should be named with their MOST COMMON NAME. Period. It makes it way easier. Eris (dwarf planet), Ceres (dwarf planet). It's plenty enough. --Deenoe 01:45, 11 October 2006 (UTC)

Ceres is NEVER refererenced as "Ceres (dwarf planet)" - but is often called "1 Ceres". Since Ceres is not available - because of disambiguation issues - we should therefore go with the most common - i.e. 1 Ceres Richard B 08:34, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
What you seem to misunderstand is that Ceres (dwarf planet) indicates that the name is Ceres and that it is a dwarf planet. It does not mean that the name is "Ceres (dwarf planet)". Therefore your logic fails, because "Ceres" is more common than "1 Ceres", and the general way to disambiguate anything on Wikipedia is by the use of a descriptive noun in parentheses. aLii 08:58, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
Personally, I've briefly learned about Ceres in school. My teacher never reference to Ceres as "1 Ceres". Moving to Ceres (dwarf planet) implicates, as said, it's called Ceres, and it's a dwarf planet. A bit like Alexisonfire (Album). THAT'S the way to disambiguate, not adding a what I qualify as a "irrelevant-to-most" number. --Deenoe 10:05, 11 October 2006 (UTC)

MPC numbers and parentheses

As discussed on Talk:Minor planet number, the official form of the MPC number seems to include the parentheses, with the no parentheses form an accepted shorter form. Should the Wikipedia not use the full and official form instead of the shorthand? This would also prevent people from mistakenly thinking Vesta is named 4 Vesta. -- Jordi· 07:44, 11 October 2006 (UTC)

At this point, I do not trust the consensus of people on Wikipedia. Someone should contact the Minor Planet Center and ask them for information on naming conventions (and also invite them to work on Wikipedia) rather than guessing about the official naming convention. George J. Bendo 08:37, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
Consensus? The discussion I refer to (and the only one on the page) is about IAU/MPC use, not Wikipedia policy. Are you confusing this with the minor planet naming vote perhaps? -- Jordi· 12:26, 11 October 2006 (UTC)

Specifically I fail to see why in §2.2 #1 and #2 are not consistent. Why would we use parentheses for minor planets with only a provisional designation, and drop the parentheses when this body receives an official name? The MPC catalogue number remains the same and should be treated the same. And then preferably with parentheses, since that is the format the MPC itself uses on official lists and in most press releases. -- Jordi· 12:30, 11 October 2006 (UTC)

I was a little confused when I wrote the above comment. After looking at the Minor planet number talk page, however, I still stand by my basic conclusion: I would not trust the average Wikipedia user to determine the proper convention without outside help. I still encourage people to go talk to the Minor Planet Center or the IAU itself rather than trying to guess what their policy is. It may also be worth contacting the editorial offices of Astronomy and Astrophysics or Icarus and asking them what their policy is regarding minor planet names. George J. Bendo 12:38, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
Seconded, an official word is needed here. My comment on the inconsistency of §2.2 #1 and #2 stands no matter what is found to be the "proper format" though. Are there any Wikipedian astronomers? Or a Wikiproject which could help here? -- Jordi· 12:43, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
Just for your information, I am a professional extragalactic astronomer. I am much more useful in discussions on galaxies than asteroids. I have also made a comment on the Wikipedia: WikiProject Astronomical objects page. Maybe someone there who knows asteroids better than I do can comment. George J. Bendo 12:51, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
For information, the current naming conventions listed here, were, at the time that section was written, the current way that they were named on Wikipedia article names - the articles were not named following the naming convention - actually the other way round - the naming convention was written following the article names then (and still) being used. The inconsistency arises as it was deemed too cluttered to include the parentheses for named ones - but the parentheses were included for ones with only provisional designations - to separate the MPC number and the discovery year more clearly. Note also that ones with only provisional designations are extremely unlikely to appear in anything other than scientific literature (and wikipedia) - so we'd probably need to closely follow the method used in most scientific journals for the most common name. Richard B 17:18, 11 October 2006 (UTC)

Asteroids: Name (asteroid)

How about if we use "Name (asteroid)" (when necessary) instead of the MPC catalog numbers, and use a policy like this:

  1. For bodies which have received official naming from the Minor Planet Center, the article title should be the object's name. If it conflicts with another article title, it may be followed by the word "asteroid" in parentheses, e.g. Vesta (asteroid).

Yath 08:43, 11 October 2006 (UTC)

I strongly prefer this to the current system suggested on the main page, which is basically suggesting that the various minor planets should have a convention of 4 different conventions! (When the current dwarf planet majority vote is taken into account) The listed example of (15760) 1992 QB1 for me says why no article should have the MPC number in its title — how many numbers do we want/need? It would be nice if we could have MPC redirects to each page, for example MPC: 1 would redirect to Ceres, MPC: 4 to Vesta, etc. Whether this is allowed by Wikipedia policy I'm unsure. aLii 08:53, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
I wasn't suggesting the above to replace all three of the guidelines currently under "asteroids", just the first item. After all, asteroids without names have to go somewhere. But the MPC redirects seem like a good idea. --Yath 09:03, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
Extremely poor example, then. Vesta's had official recognition for years. How about (15760) 1992 QB1 and 1992 QB1 as examples? Are you arware of Minor planet number? It's an attempt I made to give a primer explaining what the numbers mean. Vanished user talk 14:48, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
Sure, Minor planet number states that "4 Vesta" is a "designation", and it makes it clear that "Vesta" is the asteroid's name. So the practice of article titles being "Name" or "Name (disambiguation)" leads to a title of "Vesta (asteroid)". And the examples of (15760) 1992 QB1 and 1992 QB1 are covered by the remaining rules on this project page. --Yath 18:06, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
Looking only from the pragmatic aspect, I think it's a bad idea to propose new rules that force 100,000 articles to be re-written and moved. You can't change the opening sentences by bot. And if an official disambiguation, the minor planet number, exists, we should use it. If only to save our sanity!Vanished user talk 07:57, 12 October 2006 (UTC)
In short, any guideline that would be impossible to implement cannot be a guideline, I fear. Vanished user talk 08:18, 12 October 2006 (UTC)
There are only a few thousand artlces on individual minor planets. Most of these objects are only listed under list of asteroids. Furthermore, a bot can be built to automate the renaming of the asteroid articles and change their internal links in other articles. OTOH, I do agree that any standard that requires renaming a large number of articles should be carefully considered before it is agreed to. Also, do note that even if it is not optimal, the current scheme works.--EMS | Talk 17:53, 12 October 2006 (UTC)
Whilst scrolling down to here, I noticed this was discssed a bit higher up:
Another poster pointed out that there are 2 asteroids called Romulus, so Romulus (asteroid) is ambiguous. Similarly the last point, objects in the Kuiper Belt are generally not called asteroids - so name (asteroid) is not correct. name (astronomy) is possible - but there are two objects called Europa - so Europa (astronomy) is ambiguous. So to go with this proposal over mpc numbers raises multiple parenthesised suffixes for objects, and if we go for consistency and use the same suffix - it raises the possibility of ambiguity. Using the minor planet numbers removes any ambiguity, and disambiguates these minor planets from other objects which share the same or similar names - and we can be consistent with all numbered minor planets. Richard B 20:27, 18 September 2006 (UTC)
I think the Romulus problem is... probably the death nail in this idea. I don't see any good way around it that allows consistancy in all asteroids without using MPC numbers. Vanished user talk 18:36, 12 October 2006 (UTC)
See Romulus. One of these "asteroids" is in fact a moon of an asteroid (namely Sylvia). So an article on it would be called either Romulus (moon) of Romulus (asteroid moon). --EMS | Talk 18:58, 12 October 2006 (UTC)
Firstly, this proposal isn't based on some rabid aversion to MPC numbers. It's simply better to use "(asteroid)". Now if some object comes up and it turns out that using an MPC number is the best way to disambiguate, I'm all for it. Remember that what we propose here are guidelines, not laws, so creative solutions are not prevented by their existence.
Secondly, "consistency in all asteroid [article titles]" shouldn't be the primary goal - serving our audience should. Readers expect and deserve that article titles should unambiguously identify the name of the subject of the article. They aren't computers and don't benefit by the prominent placement of a catalog number (the infobox is the best place for that).
Thirdly, look how easily EMS overcame the failure of imagination in the Romulus dilemma above. "Romulus (asteroid moon)" - that death nail just popped right out of the coffin's lid! --Yath 19:24, 12 October 2006 (UTC)
Renaming all of the asteroid articles seems like an awful lot of work, for not an awful lot of gain. Given that the vast majority of these minor planets are only referred to in scientific literature - and on the MPC's website, we'd have to carefully look at what the most commonly used term to refer to them is. Richard B 20:05, 12 October 2006 (UTC)

I strongly oppose this: Don't make up disambiguations for disambiguations' sake. Since almost all the asteroids are almost only referenced in scientific literature, it makes sense to refer to them as they'd be referred to there. Vanished user talk 14:38, 11 October 2006 (UTC)

However, giving (15760) 1992 QB1 as 1992 QB1, in practice, seems to be what actually happens, and this might need updated. Vanished user talk 14:38, 11 October 2006 (UTC)

Moons

Should moons have their planet mentioned in their article title, e.g. Ganymede (moon of Jupiter) as opposed to Ganymede (moon)?

Using "(moon)" should be sufficient. The parenthetical clause should only be used for disambiguation. I do not think any two moons share the same name. Therefore, nothing more needs to be written to distinguish an object labeled with "(moon)". (The information about which planet the moon orbits should be in the body of the text.) George J. Bendo 13:40, 12 October 2006 (UTC)


Implementation

Can we point to this article as definitive evidence of the necessity for a move, or should consensus on that page's talk supercede these conventions? (again, it has to do with little Ceres) Hopquick 16:09, 13 October 2006 (UTC)

This page is tracking the Ceres discussion, so not really. Vanished user talk 16:31, 13 October 2006 (UTC)
Ok. So you believe that whatever we discuss here will STILL have to be confirmed over on talk:1 Ceres? Ergo, we can ignore everything in this naming convention? Hopquick 17:26, 13 October 2006 (UTC)
No, I'm just saying the section on Dwqarf Planets only just changed from tbd to this, so we ought to wait on Ceres' vore. The vote has gone ahead, it's over now. Vanished user talk 18:41, 13 October 2006 (UTC)

Can a "planet" be extrasolar?

"2.5 Extra-solar planets (exoplanet)" Per the new IAU definition extra solar is not a class of planet. :( Hopquick 17:44, 13 October 2006 (UTC)

Um... Extrasolar just means around a different star than ours. What decision? Vanished user talk 18:40, 13 October 2006 (UTC)

The IAU's definition excludes planemos which are extrasolar in a literal reading. They intentionally used "the sun" instead of "a star" in the definition of a planet. Hopquick 20:05, 13 October 2006 (UTC)

The 2006 IAU defintion defined "planet" with respect to the solar system, and specifically declined to define "planet" outside of the solar system. That definition was drafted by the working group that is only responsible for things inside the Solar System. There is another, 2003 IAU definition, that was defined by the working group that is only responsible for extrasolar planets, which is what is used to define planets outside of the solar system. That definition states that a planet has to orbit a star, and be smaller than a brown dwarf. Free-floating/interstellar planets are referred to as sub-brown dwarfs in that definition. (It does not define a lower limit however). 132.205.44.134 05:44, 3 November 2006 (UTC)

If you combine the 2006 and 2003 definitions you get:

  1. A planet must orbit a star
  2. A planet must be large enough to be rounded by gravity
  3. A planet must be orbitally dominant
  4. A planet must be smaller than a brown dwarf
  5. A planet-like object that does not orbit a star, or in a star system is a "sub-brown dwarf"
  • Planemo is left undefined, and I don't remember reading that the planemo term has been accepted by the IAU. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 132.205.44.134 (talkcontribs) 05:47, November 3, 2006 (UTC)

Policy on unnamed objects

While I don't necessarily support moving 4 Vesta to Vesta (asteroid) at this stage, I really don't like names such as (136108) 2003 EL61, (136472) 2005 FY9 etc - The common name, with which the vast majority of people will refer to these, is the year/letters/numbers scheme only, without MPC number. Also since there is no chance of other entities being called "2005 FY9", there's no reason to include the number for disambiguation purposes either.

As examples, within Wikipedia itself images such as this one and the {{Trans-Neptunian dwarf planets}} omit the MPC numbers, and most references I ever saw to Eris before its naming were to either "Xena" or to "2003 UB313", never to "(136199) 2003 UB313". Interested to know others' views on this. Cheers — SteveRwanda 18:49, 13 October 2006 (UTC)

Query: What's the average turnaround between notable minor planet getting a minor planet number and gaining an official name? If (as I believe is true for *notable* ones) it's only a few months, the question is probably academic anyway. Vanished user talk 18:58, 13 October 2006 (UTC)
The other question is whether this is actually being DONE: (136199) 2003 UB313 is a red link. Vanished user talk 19:00, 13 October 2006 (UTC)
That's probably due to previous inconsistency in the way it was named - Eris was at 2003 UB313 from the moment of the article's creation in July last year up until when it was renamed. Likewise 2003 EL61 was at 2003 EL61 until recently.
And re your other questions, it's clear that the turnaround period between discovery and naming can be several years - the two bodies I mention above, and indeed Eris itself, were all discovered between 2003 and 2004. A policy is certainly needed! SteveRwanda 19:08, 13 October 2006 (UTC)
With regards to the specific example of Eris, don't forget that it only received a numeric designation on September 13th, 2006, at the same time it was officially named. (Nevertheless, a redirect may be worth considering.) --Ckatzchatspy 19:24, 13 October 2006 (UTC)
Right'n. I'm afraid my memory for timescales is poor. Now, I did, when poking around those pages, find one reason why (136108) 2003 EL61 might be needed: Moon designations follow somwhat arcane rules:
S/2005 (2003 EL61) 1 provisional designation; nicknamed "Rudolph" by the Caltech team), renamed S/2005 (136108) 1 once its primary was numbered.
As such, it's probably valid as it explains an otherwise inexplicable changing moon designation. As it only applies to a small number of bodies that are notable, and not forever, I'd keep the format for now. Vanished user talk 19:51, 13 October 2006 (UTC)
Google search for "S/2005 (136108) 1" gives exactly one non-Wikipedia result, some Polish site. Since the statement above has no citatoin, I think we have to take it with a pinch of salt. SteveRwanda 11:22, 14 October 2006 (UTC)
Look about 3/4 of the way down this page for the provisional designations of asteroid satellites. It's very similar to the way that planetary satellites are given provisional designations; the MPC number is used instead of the letter for planets; e.g. S/2003 J 2 is the 2nd satellite of Jupiter discovered in 2003. S/1993 (243) 1 is the 1st satellite of (243) Ida in 1993, and post naming it's now (243) Ida I (Dactyl), sometimes without the brackets round the name. The number for S/2005 (136108) 1 was only assigned about a month ago, so it's hardly surprising that it's not well written about yet.Richard B 14:35, 14 October 2006 (UTC)
Re the timescales between discovery, gaining a MPC number, and gaining a name; A minor planet gets its provisional designation once it is confirmed that it is a genuine new object. A minor planet number usually follows only once its orbit has been sufficiently well determined. This is usually over the course of at least 2 likely up to 4 or more oppositions (i.e. when the Sun is opposite the asteroid in the sky) - oppositions happen just slightly less frequently than once a year for Kuiper belt objects, about 14-15 months apart for main-belt asteroids. At that point, the discoverer is allowed to suggest names for it - subject to a maximum of 2 asteroids named per month. With modern all-sky searches, this means that the vast majority of asteroids will never receive a name, and will retain their provisional designation, but will have a mpc number once their orbit becomes sufficiently well determined. The majority of these will be unlikely to attract vast amounts of popular media attention - but may appear in scientific literature. This debate would not have affected Eris. The provisional designation of 2003 UB313 was given first, but the name and number were given together. One day it was in the catalogue under 2003 UB313, the next it was in the catalogue as (136199) Eris. Eris was never in the transitional period where it had no name, but an MPC number. Richard B 00:35, 14 October 2006 (UTC)

Section on "Phrasing"

The following was recently added to the guideline as a new section entitled "Phrasing":

"Editors should avoid the first person plural forms, 'we,' 'us' and 'our,' when describing the exploration of astronomical objects. Suffixes that, etymologically, ought to refer only to the Earth or human beings are often in widespread use and are acceptable. Specifically, the 'geo-' suffix may be used for off-Earth bodies (e.g. the geology of Mars or areology)."

"The Earth perspective is assumed and locative phrasing is not necessary where there is no ambiguity. While it is useful to observe that "Alpha Centauri is the closest star system to the Solar System" in the introduction to the subject, "Alpha Centauri is a close system" will suffice at other iterations. Use common sense and avoid cluttered language. As much as possible, editors should seek word choices that make such distinctions obvious: the Solar System refers to the Sun and bodies bound to it; a star system refers to any other such complex."

While some of this may be useful, other parts need discussion and revision before going "live". Thoughts? --Ckatzchatspy 23:20, 23 September 2007 (UTC)

None of them seem especially harmful, and a few would at least kill some useless discussions that pop up on article talk pages from time to time. It does get tiresome trying to enforce all the myriad of MoS rules though.—RJH (talk) 21:01, 23 September 2008 (UTC)

exoplanet naming

User:NuclearVacuum has made an exoplanet naming guideline proposal at Talk:Extrasolar planet/Naming, however, this guideline has been modified to make it appear that a consensus has been reached at that location, when it has not yet been established. 70.51.9.5 (talk) 06:23, 23 July 2008 (UTC)

Diacritics in minor planet names

The lists of asteroids at the MPC does not include diacritics in the asteroid names, instead the name is rendered in ASCII. This usage seems to persist to the majority of other sources: to take for example the asteroid 4090 Říšehvězd, the MPC list uses the name Risehvezd, nor does NASA [7]. Similarly 2867 Šteins is usually referred to as Steins, e.g. in the Rosetta mission press releases [8]. NASA also doesn't use the diacritic [9]. Similarly the various IAU material on the dwarf planet moon Hi'iaka uses the apostrophe not the ʻokina [10]. Since it appears that the ASCII versions of the names are the most common, I propose that as a convention on Wikipedia, minor planet names should be written without diacritics in the ASCII form: i.e. Risehvezd not Říšehvězd, Hi'iaka not Hiʻiaka. Icalanise (talk) 19:43, 18 September 2008 (UTC)

I would suggest that we should use the official form of the minor planet name, as specified by the IAU. In particular, the official names of 2867 Šteins and 4090 Říšehvězd do have the diacritics (see [11].) See [12] for some statistics and [13] for a list with diacritics. Spacepotato (talk) 23:41, 18 September 2008 (UTC)
Per WP:COMMONNAME, we need to consider findability and familiarity. The majority of sources appear to use the non-diacritic forms of the names, and the non-diacritic forms are more likely to be searched for by English-speaking users, since the language does not typically contain diacritics. Icalanise (talk) 23:51, 18 September 2008 (UTC)
Findability isn't an issue as long as redirects are set up. Google ignores diacritics in articles if you don't include them in your search. We should be careful with diacritics, but there's no reason to avoid them. They don't hurt anyone. —Werson (talk) 00:19, 19 September 2008 (UTC)

Technically the Wikipedia policy is to use the most common name, not the official name. That is why we have Dog instead of Canis lupus familiaris, and Krakatoa instead of Krakatau despite the latter being a more correct translation of the name into English and increasingly used by official bodies. In English usage, asteroid names are more commonly given without the diacritics, so according to Wikipedia policy that is what we should be using, regardless of whether the diacritic form is more official or whether we could get round the issue by redirects. This is exactly the same reason why it was decided not to disambiguate the dwarf planet names using their MPC numbers: despite this providing more information and in some sense being more official, the average user will not have encountered the prefix and so the article uses the non-prefixed name and the form with the MPC number becomes a redirect. Similarly, a user who has seen the ESA reports on the Rosetta mission will search for Steins not Šteins, because the latter form, despite being official, is not the one in common use. Icalanise (talk) 10:16, 19 September 2008 (UTC)

Legalistically speaking, we have a general naming convention, WP:UCN, which can be overridden by subject-specific naming conventions, like this one. This is why we have an article at Prunus spinosa instead of at blackthorn. Practically speaking, deferring to the naming authority avoids time-consuming, fruitless arguments as to which name is the most commonly used by reliable sources. Spacepotato (talk) 19:03, 19 September 2008 (UTC)
For minor planets I often reference Schmadel (2003), Dictionary of minor planet names, which uses diacritics. Pg. 235, for example, has 2867 Šteins. Personally that seems acceptible, as long as a redirect is set up. But I can live with either page name.—RJH (talk) 02:23, 21 September 2008 (UTC)
The issue arises about what to do in the intervening time between the minor planet being named and the printed version being published - do the IAU circulars which give the name (the circulars are hidden behind a subscription requirement) include diacritics -- the publically-accessible lists of minor planets which are kept current do not include diacritics. Icalanise (talk) 10:36, 21 September 2008 (UTC)
I expect the usual fuss-bots (software or otherwise) will clean up the debris. It's the kind of thing I've learned not to fret over, in WP anyway. =)—RJH (talk) 20:57, 23 September 2008 (UTC)
The electronically available DVI, PostScript, and PDF versions of the circulars, together with the printed version, appear to all be visually identical. Spacepotato (talk) 21:56, 24 September 2008 (UTC)

Redirects

I do not see much about redirects in the above extensive discussions. I am certain we want our names to be as convenient as possible for ordinary readers, yet also consistent with "correct' usage. The latter is likely to be the name officially adopted by the professional scholarly bodies most intimately involved, as these are the people that have to deal with the complications, exceptions, and ambiguities that actually arise day-by-day.

Unfortunately these two desiderata often conflict, and it seems to me that the natural and practical way to resolve the conflicts in Wikipedia is usually by a redirect. I think this is already done in many or most cases. But since I don't see it discussed above, I propose putting, in the asteroid section of the article, explicit encouragement to redirect a professional name to the common name when an article with the common name exists, and if an object already has an article under the primary professional designation, but also a conflicting common name, then to redirect the common name to the existing article (keeping its professional name unchanged). If the common name needs disambiguation (as will often be the case), then put the disambig wikilink to the professionally named article in the list of alternatives. Objects with multiple names (very common in astronomy) should never have redundant articles, but those articles should be merged when their meaning is identical, with the final article name coming out of consensus in the merge discussion, and redirects for any others.

The asteroid section as it stands as it stands now (Dec 4, 2009) seems basically pretty good to me. The MPC number is unique and permanent, common names are common for many objects, and the combination "nnnn Name" is very widely used by professionals where a name exists, and still unambiguous even when a name has not yet been assigned. (The provisional designations really apply to groups of observations, not objects, as it can happen that asteroids are lost and recovered later, sometimes after many years, so different designations can apply to the same object for a while; and it is even conceivable that different objects could mistakenly get the same provisional designation, though this may never actually happen.) Although I have mainly been looking at the asteroid discussion above, I think the basic principle applies much more widely to astronomy naming in Wikipedia. I just don't want to jump the gun by sweeping in all other classes without detailed consideration. I also am a professional astronomer, so I confess that bias. Wwheaton (talk) 00:09, 5 December 2009 (UTC)

comets

A days ago Dicklyon introduced the example "Halley's comet" (not a proper name) replacing "Comet Halley" (a proper noun)[14]. Half an hour later he replaced another with a proper name with a non-proper name in other guideline[15]. Then, one minute later he opened a move request where he cited the guideline he had just changed[16]. He didn't say anywhere that he had been altering the guidelines before citing them. I have replaced his new example with the long-standing old example, that was also at WP:MOS#Celestial_bodies. --Enric Naval (talk) 20:17, 30 August 2011 (UTC)

RFC – WP title decision practice

Over the past several months there has been contentious debate over aspects of WP:Article Titles policy. That contentiousness has led to efforts to improve the overall effectiveness of the policy and associated processes. An RFC entitled: Wikipedia talk:Article titles/RFC-Article title decision practice has been initiated to assess the communities’ understanding of our title decision making policy. As a project that has created or influenced subject specific naming conventions, participants in this project are encouraged to review and participate in the RFC.--Mike Cline (talk) 17:57, 16 February 2012 (UTC)

IAU and Common Names for stars

Hi. The policy and various comments on this talk page refer to traditional common names that has been approved by International Astronomical Union (e.g. Wikipedia:Naming_conventions_(astronomical_objects)#Stars. My understanding is that the IAU has no such list of names, which is (in my opinion) half the problem when we decide how to refer to stars. Does anyone know anything more? Metebelis (talk) 22:23, 29 March 2012 (UTC)

See the links to common names at the end of Naming Astronomical Objects. These correspond to the proper names found on the List of proper names of stars. Regards, RJH (talk) 22:50, 31 March 2012 (UTC)
Unfortunately it's not an IAU-approved list, it's a collection of helpful links to other people's sites. So, no official list? Metebelis (talk) 12:15, 1 April 2012 (UTC)
Right. That IAU page only covers the nomenclature of stellar catalogues beginning with Bayer. The primary goal of the IAU seems to be to make sure that stars are unambiguously identified,[17][18] rather than maintaining the catalogues themselves. Lists of traditional/proper/common/historical names don't appear to be officially maintained by the IAU. Regards, RJH (talk) 14:42, 1 April 2012 (UTC)
Thanks for that, it's as I thought. So then, the comment in Wikipedia:Naming_conventions_(astronomical_objects)#Stars, "If the star has a traditional name that has been approved by International Astronomical Union", is incorrect and should be modified. I've be Bold and replace it with "If the star has a traditional name that is more widely used than any other name" (i.e. just remove the IAU clause). Metebelis (talk) 07:07, 3 April 2012 (UTC)

Problems

So by now in my project, I've dealt with the need to invoke NCASTRO for many, many stars, and I've noticed a few systematic problems. I've already emergency=added a clause for the variable star designation in the stars section, which was conspicuously absent from the guidelines before and was a glaring problem. I think it is necessary to add an explicit exception clause, since there are multiple times that it is necessary to deviate from NCASTRO to use the most common name, such as in the case of RT Aurigae. I therefore propose the addition of the following subsection to the "General Guidelines" section, as a level 3 subsection:

Exceptions
There are times in which the most common name used for an object does not follow the NCASTRO policy. In cases like this, such as with the star RT Aurigae, it is appropriate to name the article after the object's most commonly-used name, instead of following the letter of NCASTRO.

Thoughts? StringTheory11 (t • c) 16:27, 15 November 2013 (UTC)

sounds good - some of the names that are a long list of numbers and letters are virtually unusable. Cas Liber (talk · contribs) 20:24, 15 November 2013 (UTC)
  • Isn't this covered under WP:UCN and WP:POLICY ? Since NC-ASTRO is just a guideline and UCN is policy, by Wikipedia's own rules, policies overrule guidelines, so there being a common name that always comes first. At the very top of this guideline it is pointed out that the common name is used, which already covers this case. -- 70.24.244.51 (talk) 07:48, 20 November 2013 (UTC)
Isn't this exception already covered right at the top by Wikipedia:Naming_conventions_(astronomical_objects)#Common_names? Why would we need to make it any more explicit than being the very first section of this guideline? Modest Genius talk 01:54, 29 November 2013 (UTC)
Btw, I was fully in support of adding variable star designations, which was indeed an unfortunate omission. Modest Genius talk 01:57, 29 November 2013 (UTC)

IAU Working Group on Star Names

The IAU organized the WGSN in 2016 which will catalog cultural and historical names for bright stars to help preserve astronomical world heritage, and maintain a catalog of IAU-approved unique proper names for stars. The WGSN's first bulletin set out its terms of reference and naming guidelines and a table of the first two batches of names approved by the WGSN (on 30 June and 20 July 2016) together with names of stars adopted by the IAU Executive Committee Working Group on Public Naming of Planets and Planetary Satellites during the 2015 NameExoWorlds campaign. These names are incorporated in the IAU Catalog of Star Names.

Now that there are IAU-sanctioned proper names for some stars, this will require modification of articles referencing stellar naming conventions - including the idea that stars are no longer named after individuals (55 Cancri A was named Copernicus) and that pulsars don't have proper names (PSR B1257+12 was named Lich), for example. I've made a start by editing Astronomical naming conventions, Alpha Andromedae and Beta Cassiopeiae, but there are 124 stars and 1 pulsar in the IAU-CSN!

I had a query on what these names referred to in relation to multiple stars and had an email exchange with Prof Eric Mamajek, Chair, WGSN, who gave me permission to quote him as follows:

"I'll put it this way:
The proper names apply to the star in the Bright Star Catalog (the "HR" entry).
If the object is actually an unresolved multiple, then technically the name applies to the primary.
If the star has a wide, resolved companion (typically >arcsecond away), then the name applies to the primary.
One can append a "B", "C", etc. as warranted by the Washington Double Star Catalog or if it has a spectroscopic companion (e.g. in SB9 catalog).
Note that one commonly hears of the stars "Sirius A", "Procyon B", and now "Fomalhaut C" (my favorite!).
Many of these names are commonly used, and some are in SIMBAD (note that being in SIMBAD does not mean they are IAU-recognized; SIMBAD, SESAME, CDS are separate entities from the IAU, although they normally follow IAU guidelines and nomenclature very closely). However "Sirius B" itself is not an "official" IAU/WGSN name. It is possible that the WGSN may adopt proper names for components for such bright stars in the future, but this has not been decided yet. One of the ideas is that one of the cultural names could be adopted by the WGSN as a unique proper names for companions of bright stars.
I would also put it this way:
"Procyon" applies to the brighter of the two stars in that system, and this is now a WGSN-recognized name.
Informally, one may see the components called "Procyon A" and "Procyon B" in the literature and in SIMBAD.
However, I think it is possible that the WGSN may adopt another name for "Procyon B" in the future (but this would not preclude one from referring to the component as "Procyon B" informally!)."

My understanding is that this doesn't count as a verified independent source (though I asked Prof Mamajek to consider setting this out in a note to a future WGSN bulletin), but editors may wish to be aware of it in relevant articles.

Prof Mamajek also said one other thing which I'm happy to pass on: "Kudos to anyone who is helping improve the Wikipedia articles on anything astronomical!" :) Cuddlyopedia (talk) 13:17, 30 July 2016 (UTC)

I've now created an article on the IAU Working Group on Star Names, which has been reviewed and approved. Cuddlyopedia (talk) 05:54, 12 August 2016 (UTC)

Requested move, in conflict with current naming convention

See Talk:PSR B1257+12 A. Would like to see editors with some knowledge of this area commenting. Thanks, wbm1058 (talk) 14:45, 10 May 2017 (UTC)

Discussion at 2014 MU69

Since January 3rd, there is a request to move (486958) 2014 MU69 to Ultima Thule (asteroid), that is, to use the nickname as the article title. Discussion is extensive, with no apparent consensus, but has been relisted. Part of the discussion is whether the naming conventions for asteroids (i.e., no nicknames) should be changed. Renerpho (talk) 13:17, 14 January 2019 (UTC)

I have recently made some amendments in section Minor planets (formerly titled "Asteroid"). I could do a complete revision to reflect the current status on (the English) Wikipedia. It would also address typical issues with minor-planet nomenclature I came across over the last few years. This might also be helpful for cases such as Ultima Thule. Would such proposed revision be appreciated by other editors at all? Rfassbind – talk 13:21, 24 January 2019 (UTC)
Before seeing your comment here, I gave this one quick run-through per my comments in the discussion at WP:MR. The relationship between the "common names" section and the more specific guidance below needs to be made clearer, either in this way or in some other. Dekimasuよ! 21:12, 24 January 2019 (UTC)
The case of Ultima Thule is being further debated at WP:Move review#(486958) 2014 MU69. The ambiguity of NCASTRO applied to this case, and possibly similar ones, should be lifted by an appropriate hierarchisation of the guideline. For example, state that a widely-used "common name"-qualifying nickname should be prioritised against a provisional or numbered designation, but not against a subsequent IAU-endorsed official name. As noted by Dekimasu, Rfassbind's revision is a useful improvement, but it does not resolve the ambiguity. — JFG talk 05:46, 25 January 2019 (UTC)
Just noticed Dekimasu's wording changes,[19] which in my opinion do clarify the guideline and improve its compatibility with generic WP:AT spirit. In particular, switching the guidance from "articles should be named" to "articles should be titled" is likely to defuse a lot of objections, because Wikipedia is not in the business of assigning object names, but rather to reflect majority RS usage in article titles. I'll leave it for more experienced subject-matter experts to check whether this version creates any major issues with current practice and widely-accepted naming conventions. — JFG talk 19:15, 25 January 2019 (UTC)
It's also worth noting that WP:AT does not say exactly what the block quote says it does, anymore. Dekimasuよ! 21:18, 25 January 2019 (UTC)
I agree the current guidelines are ambiguous, mostly because this situation has never arisen before (an object visited before it was named). Does 'Ultimate Thule' count as a nickname, common name, or neither? The team who introduced the term Ultimate Thule use it and MU69 in different contexts, acknowledge it as a temporary nickname to be replaced by an official name soon(ish), and have no authority in naming astronomical objects. My preference is to stick with the official provisional designation until a permanent name is assigned by the IAU, but it's unclear how widely that view is shared or how to reflect it in this guideline without having unintended consequences in other cases. Either way the current move request is a clear 'no consensus' so should stick with the status quo for now. Modest Genius talk 13:05, 25 January 2019 (UTC)

Copying my Comment from WP:Move review#(486958) 2014 MU69: I was (and am) one of the opponents of the move. I do not dispute that Ultima Thule is currently the common name. Maybe I did not explain my opposition fully during the earlier discussion. What causes me headaches is the precedence this move would set for moving asteroid pages to nicknames. I admit that the situation with 2014 MU69 is unique, since it is the first "asteroid" visited by a spacecraft (and gaining widespread attention) that had not yet been named. I would support rewording WP:NCASTRO if the result was such that it kept nicknames as a no-go for most objects, but allows them in special, well defined cases. Once that is done, I will support a move request if brought forward again in a few weeks. Please let us take the time to reword WP:NCASTRO carefully before doing this, otherwise I fear too much headache from other articles. To quote Mike Brown again - things are moving slowly in the Kuiper belt. This rewording of WP:NCASTRO should include a clearer definition/extension of the word "asteroid" that applies to KBOs. When the page is moved, the disambiguator "asteroid" should either be avoided, or it should be set as policy to use this for KBOs, to keep things consistent. Renerpho (talk) 05:04, 26 January 2019 (UTC)

I am okay with most changes made, thanks so far. I have two three questions:
  • Is the rule that the page should carry the official name (whenever one exists) at odds with WP:COMMONNAME? There had been a suggestion in the move review for 2014 MU69 that a move to the official name might be opposed by those in favour of the unofficial nickname Ultima Thule (assuming this won't be the official name)?
  • Could we include some statement that makes clear when nicknames should not be used? I am thinking about cases like 2018 VG18 not to be named Farout, or cases like Eris vs. Xena for objects that are not dwarf planets? Renerpho (talk) 05:12, 26 January 2019 (UTC)
  • Yes, the older version of NCASTRO stating that the title should reflect the official name was at odds with WP:COMMONNAME. WP:COMMONNAME does not distinguish between "official" and "unofficial" names (or nicknames) because it does not recognize that any one particular source holds such authority. If a preponderance of all reliable secondary sources use a name, then that is the common name for the purposes of WP:AT. As far as the possibility that sometimes nicknames should not be used, that would seem to rely upon a determination that there is no established common name in English for a particular object. If objects have not received widespread attention from reliable sources, then it seems fine to have an established naming convention that determines how to consistently name such topics. I do not know whether this would apply to "Farout"; I have barely heard of that personally, so maybe there is no common name. "Ultima Thule" is in the news frequently so I think a common name has probably been established in that case. (I did not participate in the move discussion.) Dekimasuよ! 05:32, 26 January 2019 (UTC)
All those terms apply to 2014 MU69, and we could add planetesimal, trans-Neptunian object or small Solar System body to the mix; we don't seem to have a hard-and-fast rule to pick one. I have raised a RfC at Talk:(486958) 2014 MU69#Picking a disambiguator to get a feel of what the community may approve or reject in the case of this object. That discussion may then inform whether the guideline should be amended or left open to individual cases. — JFG talk 09:34, 26 January 2019 (UTC)
I'd like to add again that, while I don't like the idea of moving 2014 MU69 to Ultima Thule (X), I would endorse a possible future community consensus to move it if WP:NCASTRO is adjusted accordingly. Renerpho (talk) 05:22, 26 January 2019 (UTC)

Comment on cases like Farout (and Valetudo, a moon of Jupiter) - the object was announced in the media under that name. At the time, Farout was officially (and still is) known as 2018 VG18 and Valetudo was unnamed officially. The Wikipedia page for Valetudo was set up at Valetudo (moon) and was moved when it was found out the name wasn't official. The Farout page got into a bit of an edit war over the formatting of the nickname - should it be bold, italic? (I was involved in that...) It was eventually agreed to move the nickname out of the first sentence of the article to avoid making the nickname sound like it was an approved IAU name. ― Дрейгорич / Dreigorich Talk 01:25, 27 January 2019 (UTC)

I just noticed that the possible dwarf planet 2007 UK126 has been moved to a nickname back in December. In this case, that name is actually the proposed name, which is leaked in breach of IAU protocol (not that this matters to us). Renerpho (talk) 01:39, 2 February 2019 (UTC)

The naming convention article as it stands now does not yet address the problem of how to deal with nicknames in the general case (where, ideally, 2014 MU69 would be some kind of exception). Any suggestions? Renerpho (talk) 02:03, 1 February 2019 (UTC)

Ban nicknames as article titles unless they are in fact the proposed IAU name. That's what I would do. ― Дрейгорич / Dreigorich Talk 02:26, 2 February 2019 (UTC)
What, no more Halley's comet? Dicklyon (talk) 02:29, 2 February 2019 (UTC)
Seriously, though, it is not appropriate for a naming convention guideline to institute a rule that explicitly contravenes what is set out in WP:AT policy, which includes "Wikipedia does not necessarily use the subject's 'official' name as an article title; it generally prefers the name that is most commonly used (as determined by its prevalence in a significant majority of independent, reliable English-language sources)" and "Although official, scientific, birth, original, or trademarked names are often used for article titles, the term or name most typically used in reliable sources is generally preferred." (And "reliable sources" does not mean just the IAU in this case.)
The problem with referring to certain potential titles as "nicknames" is that it lends additional credence to the idea that other "official" names are authoritative. Dekimasuよ! 03:12, 2 February 2019 (UTC)
(sorry about that intervening edit of mine; fingers must have gone autonomous with brain switched off)
My Halley's comet comment was partly because we cap it as Halley's Comet based on semi-official considerations, even though it has always been more common in reliable sources as Halley's comet. The astronomy fans don't really go for the whole commonname thing, nor following style guidelines. Dicklyon (talk) 05:26, 2 February 2019 (UTC)

@Dicklyon after you have reverted my last edit, the first sentence in Section "Minor planets" now reads again

"When there is no established common name, all articles about minor planets (with the exception of officially recognized dwarf planets, addressed below) should be titled as follows:"

Obviously I have issue with your inserted fragement "When there is no established common name". Can you please give an example of a minor planet other than the mentioned exception that actually has an established common name? Rfassbind – talk 06:36, 6 February 2019 (UTC)

If none has an established common name, it's hardly an issue. If only Ultima Thule has an established common name, why not go with that? Dicklyon (talk) 07:49, 6 February 2019 (UTC)

@Dicklyon: @Rfassbind: Please don't make substantial changes to this guideline without gaining consensus first. Tidying up wording is fine, but you've both modified the rules so they produce the outcome you want in the MU69 / Ultima Thule case. I've restored the substance of the page to the same ambiguous state as it was before. We need to reach a consensus on this talk page regarding what the rules should be, before updating them. Modest Genius talk 12:12, 6 February 2019 (UTC)

For comparison, I listed 3 notable versions (original, reverted and current). Contrary to the above assertion, I don't really care about Ultima Thule. As soon as this body is named by the MPC, the discussion is over. I do care, however, about the consistency of the actual status on more than 35,000 pages including 21,787 named minor planets. Apart from 3 modifications and 5 dwarf planets, the title of all these pages is faithful to the MPC, so that there is no ambiguity. In other words, if we don't stick to what the MPC says, there won't be a consistent minor-planet nomenclature on the English Wikipedia. That would be irresponsible. Rfassbind – talk 16:25, 6 February 2019 (UTC)
side-by-side comparison of versions

Original version from July 2017 (link)

Specific guidelines

Dwarf planets

As per the consensus established at Talk:Dwarf planet/Naming, the official name should be used for the article title. In situations where there are other notable objects sharing the same name, the disambiguation term "dwarf planet" should be used in parentheses after the name. An example of this would be Eris (dwarf planet). Regardless of the article title, the MPC catalogue number/name designation should be referenced in the lead sentence. Syntax of this is still debated, but should incorporate a link to the minor planet number article.

Asteroids

Articles about asteroids and other small Solar System bodies (not including comets, which are addressed below) should be named as follows;

  1. For bodies that have received official naming from the Minor Planet Center, the article title should be the object's official minor planet number without parentheses, followed by its name e.g. 4 Vesta.
  2. Where a body has not yet received an official name, but has received a minor planet number, the article title should be the object's official minor planet number in parentheses, followed by the object's provisional designation. This provisional designation is usually the object's discovery year, followed by an alphanumeric code signifying exactly when within the year it was discovered e.g. (15760) 1992 QB1. Any use of the name other than the title should use proper subscripting, using the provided templates {{mp}} and {{mpl}} (e.g. {{mpl|(15760) 1992 QB|1}} yielding (15760) 1992 QB1).
  3. Where a body has neither received an official name nor minor planet number, the article's title should simply be the object's provisional designation as described above, e.g. 2004 JG6 (written {{mp|2004 JG|6}} yielding 2004 JG6).

Unofficial nicknames should not be used as article titles.

Natural satellites of small Solar System bodies

(tbc)

Version Rfassbind from 6 February 2019 (link)

Specific guidelines

Minor planets

All pages about a single minor planet (with the exception of officially recognized dwarf planets, addressed below) should be titled by their official minor-planet designation, which is published by the Minor Planet Center (MPC) in its periodic Minor Planet Circulars.

Official designations can be divided into three types:

  1. Provisionally designated bodies, e.g. 2004 JG6. The magic word {{DISPLAYTITLE}} in conjunction with {{mp}} should be used to properly display any subscripted indices in the title, e.g. 2004 JG6.
  2. On numbering, the provisional designation receives a leading number in parenthesis, e.g. (15760) 1992 QB1. The page's title should also be amended if there are any subscripted indices, e.g. (15760) 1992 QB1. The catalog of minor planets contains all numbered bodies.
  3. On naming, the provisional part of the designation is replaced by the officially published name. Diacritical marks should be followed as given in the official source. However, on the English Wikipedia, named minor planets undergo three modifications from the official MPC publication:
    • The number is given without parentheses, e.g. 4 Vesta, not (4) Vesta
    • For composite names, the hyphenated form in the official source is typically changed to a variant with an en-dash. This is a common practice based on MOS:ENDASH.
    • It is recommended to always use a straight (typewriter) apostrophe rather than a typographic one (curly apostrophe). This modification does not include the ʻOkina letter, which should be preserved.

Apart from these modification, and with the exception of officially recognized dwarf planets, the page title for each and every minor planet on the English Wikipedia follows these rules without exception. While internal designations and unofficial names such as nicknames may be mentioned in the lead of the article, they are not appropriate for being used as page title.

Minor-planet moons

Naming of these articles should follow underlying naming policy.

Dwarf planets

Dwarf planets are minor planets. The page title obeys the same rules as described above. However, for IAU-recognized dwarf planets, the number part of the designation is dropped on the English Wikipedia. There are currently five officially recognized dwarf planets:

  1. Ceres (dwarf planet)
  2. Eris (dwarf planet)
  3. Haumea
  4. Makemake
  5. Pluto

When the the same name is shared with other notable objects or figures, the disambiguation term "dwarf planet" should be used in parentheses after the name. All other dwarf planets that are not (yet) recognized by the IAU keep their catalog number in the title of the page.

Current version 7 February 2019 (link)

Specific guidelines

Minor planets

When there is no established common name, all articles about minor planets (with the exception of officially recognized dwarf planets, addressed below) should be titled as follows:

  1. For bodies that have received official naming from the Minor Planet Center (MPC), the article title should be the object's minor planet number (without parentheses), followed by its official name e.g. 4 Vesta.
  2. Where a body has not yet received an official name, but has received a minor planet number, the article title should be the object's official minor planet number in parentheses, followed by the object's provisional designation. This provisional designation is usually the object's discovery year, followed by an alphanumeric code signifying exactly when within the year it was discovered e.g. (15760) 1992 QB1. Any use of the name other than the title should use proper subscripting, using the provided templates {{mp}} and {{mpl}} (e.g. {{mpl|(15760) 1992 QB|1}} yielding (15760) 1992 QB1).
  3. Where a body has neither received an official name nor minor planet number, the article's title should simply be the object's provisional designation as described above, e.g. 2004 JG6 (written {{mp|2004 JG|6}} yielding 2004 JG6).

Unofficial nicknames should not be used as article titles. Official minor-planet names are published in the MPC's Minor Planet Circulars. Diacritical marks should be included in titles. For composite names, however, hyphens should be changed into en-dashes per MOS:ENDASH. Use of straight apostrophes is recommended. This does not include the ʻOkina letter, which should be preserved.

Minor-planet moons

Naming of these articles should follow underlying naming policy.

Dwarf planets

When there is no established common name for the subject of the article, the official name should be used for the article title. In situations where there are other notable objects sharing the same name, the disambiguation term "dwarf planet" should be used in parentheses after the name. An example of this would be Eris (dwarf planet). Regardless of the article title, the MPC catalogue number/name designation should be referenced in the lead sentence. Syntax of this is still debated, but should incorporate a link to the minor planet number article.

  • I have undone the reversion that reintroduced the phrase "Unofficial nicknames should not be used as article titles", because it reintroduced internal contradiction between the top of the page ("Common names should be used for article names in preference to official, IAU-sanctioned names where the former are widely used") and the middle ("Unofficial nicknames should not be used as article titles"). The explanation had been that the new version did not enjoy consensus, but self-contradiction cannot enjoy consensus; the lower portion conflicted with the underlying policy, WP:AT. Besides here, the changes were also discussed at WP:MR with Renerpho and JFG. As above, the older version of WP:NCASTRO stating that the title should reflect the official name was at odds with WP:COMMONNAME. WP:COMMONNAME does not distinguish between "official" and "unofficial" names or "nicknames" because it does not recognize that any one particular source holds such authority. If a preponderance of all reliable secondary sources use a name, then that is the common name for the purposes of WP:AT. And as above, please note that I did not participate in the move request and do not really have an opinion about the title. But reintroducing a paradox will not help move the discussion forward. Dekimasuよ! 23:47, 6 February 2019 (UTC)
  • Perhaps it would be helpful if any editor who would seek to reintroduce "Unofficial nicknames should not be used as article titles" could define what a "nickname" is in terms of Wikipedia policies and guidelines such as WP:OFFICIAL. Dekimasuよ! 23:49, 6 February 2019 (UTC)
  • And I have undone the change by Dekimasu. This doesn't come easy to me, and I don't want to risk an edit war. It's not that I don't think a change to the guideline is necessary. But given that the old guideline has served well for years, we should agree on changes here (on the talk page) before making hasty changes. Without a proper understanding of what a nickname is, there can't even be consensus about whether the guideline is self-contradictory. So, Modest Genius is right. I don't know what a "nickname" is should be. I think unofficial nicknames should be avoided (as the guideline states as of now), but I acknowledge that exceptions might be necessary based on WP:COMMONNAME and a clear definition of "nickname". What the guideline for those exceptions should be, I don't know. Renerpho (talk) 00:19, 7 February 2019 (UTC)
  • At the risk of answering my own question, I think the answer is that it is not possible to define "nickname" in this context. Removing "nick-" (aren't "nicknames" "unofficial" by definition?) leaves "Unofficial names should not be used as article titles," which is clearly in conflict with WP:OFFICIAL. There are a range of names that are used to apply to whatever the subject of the article is, and we choose the one supported by a preponderance of reliable secondary sources. If there is any leeway at all, it is in what can be considered a reliable secondary source for objects that we are attempting to classify using this naming convention. Dekimasuよ! 02:41, 7 February 2019 (UTC)

I concur that the word "nickname" is problematic. Your suggestion to instead clarify what counts as a reliable source is good, Dekimasu. Maybe the best approach is to look at what the original guideline was trying to achieve/prevent, and to implement something along that line. Since the guideline clearly states that there is no sole authority to official names, the exclusion of unofficial names probably wasn't the intention when nicknames were excluded. Rather, the possibility that nicknames could be the common name was either not seen, or sources that were using such nicknames were a priori excluded as unreliable.
There has been a long practise to give "nicknames" to new discoveries, often to avoid having to use the IAU designation in press releases. Examples of such nicknames that were in use for extended periods of time include: Xena for Eris,[20] Biden for 2012 VP113,[21] Snow White for 2007 OR10.[22] Following the guideline against nicknames, none of those articles have been moved to those nicknames, even though some of them may have been the WP:COMMONNAME at some point (Xena definitely was). I think none of them should be moved, and neither should be more recent cases like 2018 VG18 (Farout),[23] or 2015 TG387 (The Goblin).[24] What is it that distinguishes those from Ultima Thule? If we can answer that question, the problem should be solved. Renerpho (talk) 03:51, 7 February 2019 (UTC)

What distinguishes Ultima Thule from Farout and The Goblin is that it has received immensely more mainstream coverage. That makes the name much stronger. Language evolves by usage. — JFG talk 16:47, 7 February 2019 (UTC)
What makes Ultima Thule different from Xena? Why should they be treated any differently? I see no reason for them to be. ― Дрейгорич / Dreigorich Talk 06:36, 12 February 2019 (UTC)
We are not here to replay the history of naming for Xena at Wikipedia. If that was an open case today, it would indeed be similar to Ultima Thule, as a not-yet-officially-named object that received plentiful media coverage under its nickname. — JFG talk 10:24, 12 February 2019 (UTC)
True. But can it be used as a precedent for Ultima Thule? ― Дрейгорич / Dreigorich Talk 15:04, 12 February 2019 (UTC)
I wouldn't give much weight to this case. It happened 13–14 years ago, and both Wikipedia policy and astronomical understanding of the Kuiper Belt have evolved a lot since then. — JFG talk 16:12, 12 February 2019 (UTC)

Suggestion Rather than the categorical "Unofficial nicknames should not be used as article titles", maybe that distinction can be made explicit like this: "The usage of unofficial nicknames as article titles is discouraged, unless [...]" - where the exception, following JFG, could be: "[...] those are the common name and have received widespread media coverage, like Ultima Thule." I know that this is somewhat redundant, because media coverage is part of the common name policy, but it clarifies (for me) that obscure cases like The Goblin should remain at the official name unless there is really good reason for a move. As there probably is for 2014 MU69, which could serve as an example and precenent.
A note of caution: Including 2014 MU69 as an example before it is moved to the nickname (in a possible second move request) could be seen as a kind of supervote - by changing the guideline with the intention to fix the outcome of the move discussion. The example should be left out as of now, but could be included here after (if) that move is done. Renerpho (talk) 04:45, 13 February 2019 (UTC)
EDIT: Striked out mention of common name, as it is obligatory. Renerpho (talk) 04:53, 13 February 2019 (UTC)

Before you all scream "Hurray! Done!", some words about possible negative consequences of implementing that idea: It should be clear that, as soon as Ultima Thule receives an official name that is different from the nickname, this does now conflict with the guideline how to title articles about named asteroids (number plus official name), possibly opening another round of requested moves from the nickname back to the official name. While I hope that the official name eventually becomes the common name, as it did with Eris, this will take time. How do we handle this case? Renerpho (talk) 05:02, 13 February 2019 (UTC)
As far as my opinion is concerned, there is still a problem as long as the phrase "unofficial nicknames" is used. Again, if you want actively to define "official" in a certain way, that might work, but no meaningful distinction has been made between "names" and "nicknames" in this context. Right now, "unofficial nicknames" still seems to mean "names that don't seem official." Dekimasuよ! 05:24, 13 February 2019 (UTC)
Comment Most of the "nicknames" that WP:NCASTRO is intended to apply to (Farout, The Goblin, etc.) are explicitly called "nicknames" by the discoverers in the initial press releases. My understanding is that they are introduced for PR reasons, as media may be reluctant to distribute the news without a catchy name. See here for Farout, The Goblin, and Snow White. NCASTRO refers to them as "nicknames" because that's the term used in most of the primary/secondary sources. However, none of those press releases ever defines what a nickname is, or what makes these nicknames "nicknames". The term implies that the name is unofficial, getting out of the way of the IAU; any meaning beyond that is left unclear, especially without context. I guess that's why we are having trouble to define it for Wikipedia. Right now, NCASTRO describes them as unofficial nicknames, which indeed begs the question what an "official nickname" is! Renerpho (talk) 07:10, 13 February 2019 (UTC)
Adding: Sometimes, the media itself invents a nickname (example: Great Pumpkin and Spooky for 2015 TB145), with the purpose of increasing the reach of their news outlets. Those are also included in NCASTRO's unofficial nicknames category. As is Ultima Thule, see here. Renerpho (talk) 07:19, 13 February 2019 (UTC)
If the media invented a nickname or propagated it extensively, it shouldn't be the Wikipedia title. ― Дрейгорич / Dreigorich Talk 12:51, 13 February 2019 (UTC)
Titles that are propagated extensively are the Wikipedia titles, by policy. If that is the distinction you wish to make then you probably need to go through Wikipedia talk:Article titles and the Wikipedia:Village pump to institute a change. Dekimasuよ! 18:58, 13 February 2019 (UTC)
All right, perhaps a workaround would be to deprecate the use of names that are called nicknames in the sources themselves. For example, if BBC or CNN or The New York Times (something like a preponderance of reliable sources, the normal standard) say "the object nicknamed Ultima Thule," we can treat the title as deprecated on that basis; but if BBC and CNN and The New York Times all say "the object named Ultima Thule" or just "Ultima Thule," it would not be deprecated. 18:58, 13 February 2019 (UTC)
I'm okay with that compromise. ― Дрейгорич / Dreigorich Talk 21:17, 13 February 2019 (UTC)
"Unofficial nicknames should not be used as article titles""Appellations referred to as nicknames by reliable sources should not be used as article titles"? Dekimasuよ! 22:00, 13 February 2019 (UTC)
Wikisigh We're never going to get anywhere with this, aren't we? Nicknames are by definition unofficial. If a nickname becomes official, it's not a nickname. The common name article policy was bought up a lot in the discussion, so I feel this is a good point to draw the line, barring cases similar to "Ultima Thule". Since Ultima Thule has become the common name and is referred to it as such in most news outlets, I'm more okay with it by this point, but I'd still prefer 2014 MU69. For cases like The Goblin and Snow White, no. They're nowhere near notable enough. ― Дрейгорич / Dreigorich Talk 22:14, 13 February 2019 (UTC)
I thought the suggested wording was in line with what you had agreed to; I don't disagree that nicknames are by definition unofficial. However, since we do not recognize that particular authorities attempting to designate their own names as official have that authority (under the common name policy), the only way I see to include "nickname" at all is to carve out a reference to what to do when reliable sources refer to specific appellations as nicknames. If you'd like to suggest something different, please go ahead. Dekimasuよ! 22:23, 13 February 2019 (UTC)
In that case, I feel like I must capitulate. I have too strong of a pro-IAU policy to comment much on my suggestions for handling nicknames. ― Дрейгорич / Dreigorich Talk 22:43, 13 February 2019 (UTC)

I support "Appellations referred to as nicknames by reliable sources should not be used as article titles". Maybe change it to [...] mainly referred to [...], to make clear that a name is neither discounted by a single reference calling it a nickname, nor accepted once a single reference is found that doesn't. However, as Dreigorich pointed out, there is a good chance that any resulting move discussions will still have trouble to reach consensus. (I'm sure he is not the only one who has difficulties accepting non-IAU names as common names; I am disregarding my personal feelings against this, too!) In short, this may remove the ambiguity and the alleged contradiction in the NCASTRO policy, but it won't do much in terms of cooling down move discussions. Maybe that's all we can do, and we are trying to solve an unsolvable problem? Renerpho (talk) 23:42, 13 February 2019 (UTC)

I think you're right, Renerpho. I doubt there will be any sort of consensus around this issue. ― Дрейгорич / Dreigorich Talk 23:47, 13 February 2019 (UTC)
Well, I think we can reach consensus, Dreigorich, just not the "big" one we were aiming for. It is not a problem if people have personal feelings that contradict a Wikipedia policy. As long as the policy is clear (and considered useful), those personal feelings can be disregarded recognised as such. Problems arise when policies are unclear and/or appear to contradict itself. We can solve that problem. In any upcoming move discussions, consensus will be made easier once it is clear what is Wikipedia policy and what isn't. Renerpho (talk) 23:53, 13 February 2019 (UTC)
I would agree. For now, I'd accept a policy where Ultima Thule could be a precedent either way (remain at 2014 MU69 or move to Ultima Thule with an optional disambiguator, but the disambiguator is another can of worms). I think the reason for the no consensus was this lack of clarity on what to do in an unprecedented situation that no one saw coming in 2006-ish, and we are now trying to figure that out. This is not to say that we will close every loophole. It is possible that in 10 years we will be having this discussion again because someone discovered something to mess up Wikipedia policy again. ― Дрейгорич / Dreigorich Talk 23:59, 13 February 2019 (UTC)

Tagging those who contributed to this discussion, to ask whether there is consensus to change it to "Appellations mainly referred to as nicknames by reliable sources should not be used as article titles". JFG, Rfassbind, Dekimasu, Modest Genius, Dicklyon, Dreigorich? (Apologies if I forgot anybody.) As I said, I support the change. Renerpho (talk) 00:17, 14 February 2019 (UTC)

Support. ― Дрейгорич / Dreigorich Talk 00:18, 14 February 2019 (UTC)
Support. Dekimasuよ! 00:20, 14 February 2019 (UTC)
OK but do such things exist? Dicklyon (talk) 03:26, 14 February 2019 (UTC)
Such things? If you mean "Appellations mainly referred to as nicknames by reliable sources" then yes, those exist and are plentiful. See the discussion above. "The Goblin", "Farout" and "Snow White" are prime examples, as was "Ultima Thule" before the flyby (that name has caught on since, and is now used more widely). Renerpho (talk) 04:01, 14 February 2019 (UTC)
OK, good. I hadn't read enough to know that many nicknames really are characterized as nicknames. I'm good with this. Dicklyon (talk) 04:05, 14 February 2019 (UTC)
No – Remove sentence – I understand the motivation behind this change, but that's seriously convoluted wording which, as noted by a few editors above, would do little to guide consensus in future contested cases. I think the phrase about not using "unofficial nicknames" is itself the main source of confusion, and is entirely unnecessary. The standard five WP:CRITERIA in our article titling policy already covers the distinction between names that are used in a vast majority of sources and names that are only used anecdotally or for communication purposes. NCASTRO only needs to reaffirm that official IAU names are the default position, and absent such an official name, WP:AT applies if there is a common name in the Wikipedia acception of that term. Routine objects, or objects only covered anecdotically, will keep their alphanumerical designator, while objects that become household names beyond isolated news reports would switch to their common name until IAU gives them an official one. Apart from Ultima Thule, I can only ascertain that Xena might have followed this path, given the breadth of contemporary coverage and the significant delay until it was named Eris. All other nicknames such as Biden and The Goblin have been anecdotal and already forgotten. ʻOumuamua was briefly called Rama by some sources, but that didn't stick. — JFG talk 08:15, 14 February 2019 (UTC)
(This is closer to my view, but the version above seems to be what is able to gain consensus. Dekimasuよ! 12:38, 14 February 2019 (UTC))
Are you saying that Ultima Thule should be moved to the official IAU name as soon as it is named? That seems to contradict WP:COMMONNAME: I think that the IAU name is unlikely to become the common name for quite a while after the naming (if at all). There is no policy that says that official IAU names are the default position once an object is named. IAU does not have that authority (on Wikipedia, anyway). They are merely a first obvious choice. Renerpho (talk) 22:18, 14 February 2019 (UTC)
We do not need to speculate over the fate of this article's title after the IAU assigns an official name. We only need to decide what the article should be titled under current circumstances. Nobody knows when the IAU will take a stance; heck nobody even knows whether the 2014 MU69 discoverers have submitted a proposed name yet. This process may take weeks or may take years. The question before us is "how should NCASTRO deal with objects that have no official name, yet have received strong enough coverage under a nickname to effectively create a common name, as understood under Wikipedia's article titling policy?" — JFG talk 23:35, 14 February 2019 (UTC)
If an IAU name for Ultima Thule (or similar cases) is decided, it should take precedence over a previous nickname, in case Ultima Thule does get named. Maybe this could be similar to the Swaziland/Eswatini case, but ideally the decision should be made more rapidly than that. ― Дрейгорич / Dreigorich Talk 23:37, 14 February 2019 (UTC)
In reply to this, and also to Renerpho's question above, when the name is changed should determined by the underlying titling policy under WP:NAMECHANGES in either event. Dekimasuよ! 02:06, 15 February 2019 (UTC)
NASA has provided a good test case for the rewording described here. There is a new article called "New Horizons Spacecraft Returns Its Sharpest Views of Ultima Thule" at nasa.gov, and the first sentence reads "The mission team called it a "stretch goal" – just before closest approach, precisely pointing the cameras on NASA's New Horizons spacecraft to snap the sharpest possible pictures of the Kuiper Belt object nicknamed Ultima Thule, its New Year's flyby target and the farthest object ever explored." So "Ultima Thule" is mentioned by name by a reliable scientific source here, but "Ultima Thule" is explicitly referred to as a nickname. Dekimasuよ! 21:24, 23 February 2019 (UTC)

An alternative proposal

Apologies that I've been neglecting this discussion. I feel like it's getting too hung up on the meaning of a 'nickname'. This NCASTRO guideline serves to interpret the policy WP:AT, which in this case means the WP:COMMONNAME section. However, WP:OFFICIAL is neither a policy nor a guideline.
There are plenty of examples where we clearly should favour IAU-approved names, but also counterexamples, as discussed above. Phrasing a guideline which leads to the 'sensible' outcomes in each case is not straightforward.
After some thought, I think the best way around this issue is to phrase it in terms of how to determine the WP:COMMONNAME. The problem we're trying to avoid is where coverage in the popular media (or the press releases it is based upon) uses a different name to astronomers themselves in the scientific literature. We could therefore simply state that when there is more than one name in common usage, the scientific literature counts as a more reliable source than the popular press for determining the names of astronomical objects.
That would keep us in line with WP:COMMONNAME, being simply a caveat to interpreting that policy. In almost all the cases I can think of would lead to the 'sensible' outcomes we mostly seem to favour. I therefore propose the following changes to NCASTRO:
Common names should be used for article names in preference to official, IAU-sanctioned names where the former are widely used and are unambiguous. to Common names should be used for article titles, provided they are unambiguous. When more than one name is in common usage, preference should be given to the name used in the more reliable sources. For astronomical objects, papers in scientific journals or IAU publications are regarded as more reliable than press releases or articles in the popular media.
Unofficial nicknames which have not been through the IAU naming process (e.g. Bellerophon and Osiris) are not officially recognized, and should not be used. These names are only to be mentioned in the article. to Proper names which have not been through the IAU naming process (e.g. Bellerophon and Osiris) should not be used, unless they have become the common name in the scientific literature. Simply mention these names in the article instead.
Unofficial nicknames should not be used as article titles. Official minor-planet names are published in the MPC's Minor Planet Circulars. to Proper names should follow the guidelines on common names above. Most frequently, the common name used in scientific literature is the one published in the MPC's Minor Planet Circulars.
Thoughts? Modest Genius talk 15:46, 17 February 2019 (UTC)

I have alerted the projects WT:AST and WT:ASTRO to this proposal. Modest Genius talk 16:01, 17 February 2019 (UTC)
Full support and this is closer to what I had in mind regarding policy. ― Дрейгорич / Dreigorich Talk 23:29, 17 February 2019 (UTC)
The first and third changes seem fine. I think I suggested a similar change regarding scientific sources above. However, I am not a fan of "Proper names which have not been through the IAU naming process (e.g. Bellerophon and Osiris) should not be used, unless they have become the common name in the scientific literature" following the first change. I think the guidance about what reliable sources to weigh heavily in the first change is sufficient—there are cases in which the notability of the object is primarily a result of its coverage outside of scientific literature, and if those result in the establishment of a common name in English while the scientific coverage is lacking, then we should still respect that there is such a common name. (As an aside, is it necessary to specify "proper" here?) Further, I think we already have sufficient consensus above to implement the smaller change noted there as a first (possibly intermediary) step. Dekimasuよ! 23:43, 17 February 2019 (UTC)
Support Thanks Modest Genius, that proposal goes in a good direction! I share Dekimasu's support for parts 1+3. What do you mean by "smaller changes noted above"? Regarding lack of coverage in scientific publications (part 2 of Modest Genius's proposal): I think that's no problem. When a name is strong enough, it will be used in the scientific literature. There is a consistent usage of "Ultima Thule" alongside the IAU name in scientific publications from before the flyby, even from outside the circle of the New Horizons team.[25] This can be seen as indication that by this time (before the first move request), Ultima Thule had been accepted as a common name in the scientific literature. If a name is strong enough, it will be used in the literature. What may happen is that a name is so new that the scientific literature did not have time to react, in which case a move to that name may be WP:TOOSOON. Keeping the stakes high is a good thing!
Have we solved the "and are unambiguous" problem? I have used that argument in the first move discussion, based on the fact that Ultima Thule is far from unambiguous. Does adding a disambiguator like Ultima Thule (Kuiper belt object) solve that problem, or is your proposed sentence not applicable as soon as disambiguation is required? Renerpho (talk) 11:57, 18 February 2019 (UTC)
Re: "smaller change noted above": the wording change from the last section, above the new discussion in this section. Dekimasuよ! 17:35, 18 February 2019 (UTC)
Comment A word about "unless they have become the common name in the scientific literature": When interpreting this, proper weight should be given to the fact that WP:OFFICIAL may not be a Wikipedia policy, but sticking to official names is very much a policy guiding scientific publications. Non-usage of an unofficial name in some scientific publications, or usage mainly alongside the official name, should not be seen as indication that a name is not accepted as the common name. Any consistent usage of the unofficial name in the scientific literature recognises it as noteworthy. Renerpho (talk) 12:06, 18 February 2019 (UTC)
WP:OFFICIAL is just an explanation of what is already in the WP:AT policy: "Wikipedia does not necessarily use the subject's 'official' name as an article title; it generally prefers the name that is most commonly used (as determined by its prevalence in a significant majority of independent, reliable English-language sources) as such names will usually best fit the five criteria listed above" and from the footnote "Discussions about article titles commonly look at additional off-site sourcing, such as frequency of usage in news publications, books, and journals. 'Common name' in the context of article naming means a commonly or frequently used name, and not necessarily a common (vernacular) name, as opposed to scientific name, as used in some disciplines." Also, "Although official, scientific, birth, original, or trademarked names are often used for article titles, the term or name most typically used in reliable sources is generally preferred." So in that sense, yes, it is policy. Dekimasuよ! 17:35, 18 February 2019 (UTC)

Any more ideas for policy changes or statements, guys? It's quite silent here. crickets ― Дрейгорич / Dreigorich Talk 06:59, 28 February 2019 (UTC)

Reviving the discussion

It seems like a consensus was within reach when this discussion suddenly died down a few months ago. Any chance for a revival, Modest Genius, Dreigorich, Dekimasu, JFG, Dicklyon, Rfassbind? Renerpho (talk) 04:46, 25 May 2019 (UTC)

There are enough ideas stated here. Next good step would be to propose a change or clarification of guidelines, and launch an RFC, I think. Dicklyon (talk) 05:16, 25 May 2019 (UTC)
+1 to an RfC. Shall we try and formulate the question adequately first? — JFG talk 14:39, 25 May 2019 (UTC)
+1 to an RfC, and yes, we need to know the question first. What will be discussed, Modest Genius's most recent draft from above? Renerpho (talk) 00:07, 26 May 2019 (UTC)
Apologies for my silence, I've been busy IRL. I don't think we need an RFC to edit this guideline; consensus on this talk page and agreement by the WikiProject should be sufficient. I alerted both WT:AST and WT:ASTRO to my proposal in February. Modest Genius talk 21:27, 2 June 2019 (UTC)

The discussion is about the naming of minor planet articles on the English Wikipedia (article title). For more than a decade, the basic rule has been to follow the official nomenclature as published by the Minor Planet Center (MPC). Of course there are exceptions where Wikipedia diverges from the MPC. These exceptions concern named minor planets (no parenthesis is used) and IAU-recognized dwarf planets (no numbering is used in the article's title), besides a couple of diacritical recommendations. This year, however, a new exception has been introduced: "When there is no established common name, ..." which borrows from the more generic guideline which states that "Common names should be used for article names in preference to official, IAU-sanctioned names where the former are widely used and are unambiguous". This new "common-name exception" might seem plausible to some editors, but it completely undermines the rigid naming conventions established for minor planets. It is a slippery slope and ultimately leads to never-ending discussions as to whether or not Name-XYZ is a common, widely used and unambiguous one. So far, this "common-name exception" has only been (unsuccessfully) applied to Ulitma Thule, officially named (486958) 2014 MU69, but there are 20,000+ named minor planets and more than half a million numbered ones, many with nicknames and/or alternative designations, which may be regarded as a common name by some editors, sometime in the future. It is therefore best to stick to the well-established naming convention and explicitly state that "common names" do not apply to minor planets. In addition, section dwarf planets needs to be amended as well, as it does not mention anymore the distinction in nomenclature between dwarf planets recognized by the IAU and those that are not. Rfassbind – talk 15:11, 5 June 2019 (UTC)

Comment I can see how debating nicknames and the like could become a real pain in the ass. ('Snow White (dwarf planet)' for OR10??) But I think a narrower exception should be made: If astronomers working on an object start using a non-IAU name as the name of the object. An example is 229762 Gǃkúnǁʼhòmdímà. That's now the IAU name, but for several months prior the astronomers who submitted the name used it as the name in peer-reviewed publications, precisely because the IAU had not accepted it -- they were dragging their feet over orthography. I moved the article to the new name, and that was accepted here (including by several experienced WP astronomy editors who made clear in the article that the name had not been accepted by the IAU). Same for 469705 ǂKá̦gára, and in that case the IAU still hadn't accepted the name last I checked. Something similar might conceivably happen with Makemake's moon, which is being considered for a name (with the obvious choice as the front-runner), though if that's not a separate article it wouldn't matter. Similarly for the many geographic features of Pluto which (last I checked) haven't been accepted by the IAU but are commonly used (including in WP article titles) because they're the only thing available, and the people who came up with them have naming rights. But we wouldn't want to do this with e.g. OR10 > Gonggong, as (1) they may not have submitted the name yet and (2) AFAIK no-one's using the name in peer-reviewed publication. I think the exception should be quite narrow to avoid endless debate.
BTW, it's not "dwarf planets recognized by the IAU" but rather objects that were named by the IAU under the assumption that they are dwarf planets -- whether they turn out to actually be dwarf planets is irrelevant, and there is no official IAU recognition of dwarf planets apart from the bureaucratic one of naming conventions. — kwami (talk) 21:17, 21 June 2019 (UTC)
Sorry guys, wasn't pinged here for some reason and only now heard of this. The policy mentioned above makes the most sense for me personally and for Wikipedia. I have nothing better to say. I'm in support of Gonggong (although that is a borderline case for me), but not MU69, as there is no formal proposed name that is known yet. I think there are only three objects in Wikipedia history that has been disputed that I know of - OR10, MU69, and Eris back when it was UB313. Not sure about Haumea or Makemake, though. ― Дрейгорич / Dreigorich Talk 04:55, 30 June 2019 (UTC)

Things petered out again. I've gone ahead and implemented my proposal, with slightly revised wording to take into account the feedback above. Modest Genius talk 15:55, 20 February 2020 (UTC)

I have no objections, thanks Modest Genius. Renerpho (talk) 22:12, 20 February 2020 (UTC)

@Modest Genius: Thanks for your work. In general this seems to be an improvement over the previous state! I have made some minor edits, where I felt it was necessary. I have a question about one thing: Only if the planet is intentionally catalogued differently than its parent star - who is it who can "intentionally catalogue" it differently? I am unaware of the authority on that matter. Renerpho (talk) 13:07, 21 February 2020 (UTC)

Good question! This sentence was introduced back in 2008 (then phrased as 'purposely catalogued') by @NuclearVacuum. Talk:Exoplanet/Naming#Third_proposal doesn't really explain it. I think the intention is for this to apply to exoplanet designations which were derived from the project or instrument that found them. However, it might now be outdated as the convention is e.g. Kepler-7b orbits Kepler-7. Even the given example is now at TrES-1b. Maybe we could just delete it? Modest Genius talk 13:22, 21 February 2020 (UTC)
I don't think it has become irrelevant. The TrES-1b article is still not named according to the parent star's article title, but it is intentionally catalogued differently (whatever that means). The star is still named GSC 02652-01324, not TrES-1. You may be right about the intention of the phrase; the question is when to do that. I think the answer is the usual one: If the star and the planet have different common names (as in the example above) then they can be named independently of each other. This does not require that anything is done intentionally, just that it is done. Renerpho (talk) 13:47, 21 February 2020 (UTC)

Naming conventions for pulsars

According to Pulsar#Nomenclature, the name includes a suffix of the pulsar's right ascension and degrees of declination - examples are PSR 0531+21 and PSR 0021-72D. Since the suffix is a positive or negative number, presumably the minus sign (U+2212) should be used. However, looking at Category:Pulsars, actual practice is inconsistent - some use a minus (e.g. PSR B1829−10), some a dash (U'002D') (e.g. PSR B1620-26) and some an endash (U'2013') (e.g. PSR J1614–2230). Which should it be? Colonies Chris (talk) 15:42, 30 April 2019 (UTC)

A minus sign is correct. This isn't specific to pulsars - any designation which is based on coordinates has the same issue (e.g. those from 2MASS). Modest Genius talk 13:25, 21 February 2020 (UTC)
This seems important enough to be mentioned in the guideline. Renerpho (talk) 13:40, 21 February 2020 (UTC)