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Bar, Cafe, International, Mediterranean, Barbecue. See what travelers are saying: Reviewed July 22, Convenient location, edible sushi. Reviewed February 16, Reviewed February 9, Good music, great cocktails. Reviewed November 26, Reviewed October 7, I don't like places like that one!
Reviewed April 26, via mobile. Few drinks with a lot of rain.
Ask robertkZGS about Planet Fun. Thank robertkZGS. This review is the subjective opinion of a TripAdvisor member and not of TripAdvisor LLC. Planet Club - street Tsar Simeon I 26, Varna, Bulgaria - Rated based on Reviews "I was there last night with my friends. I m very very.
Reviewed January 2, National Assembly of the Republic of Bulgaria. Ministry of Agriculture and Food. Bar , Cafe , International , Mediterranean , Barbecue. Planet Club Sofia is one of the venues attracting with charm and harmony concept that combines the best from early morning dawn to late evening hours. All of your saved places can be found here in My Trips. Log in to get trip updates and message other travelers.
Log in Join Recently viewed Bookings Inbox. Mon - Fri 9: Sat - Sun Reviewed 2 weeks ago. Reviewed January 27, Planet Club Sofia is one of the venues attracting with charm and harmony concept that combines the best from early morning dawn to late evening hours. Based in the heart of Sofia, the club acts like a real oasis that attracts with exotic and Open Now Hours Today: More than 3 hours.
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Is this a must-do if you are traveling with a big group greater than 5? Pluto enjoyed 75 years in the planet club, but its membership was first threatened in when astronomers discovered a distant object now known as Eris.
Although it was believed to be bigger than Pluto, scientists were reluctant to label it a "planet," worried that doing so would open the floodgates for hundreds of trans-Neptunian objects TNOs to suddenly swamp the exclusive clubhouse of planets. According to the official statement, a planet is "a celestial body that a is in orbit around the Sun, b has sufficient mass for its self-gravity to overcome rigid body forces so that it assumes a hydrostatic equilibrium nearly round shape, and c has cleared the neighborhood around its orbit.
It was the third point that forced Pluto to hand in its gun and badge. It orbits in the Kuiper Belt, a messy neighborhood chock-full of rocks and debris.
As a result Pluto, along with fellow TNOs like Eris, Haumea, Makemake and Sedna, were relegated to a new class of object called "dwarf planet," which essentially meet the first two criteria for a planet but not the third. Not everyone was onboard with the change though. Planetary scientists Philip Metzger and Alan Stern — key figures on the New Horizons mission, which gave us our closest look at Pluto in — have long argued that the definition doesn't fit.
If you take that literally, then there are no planets, because no planet clears its orbit.
Not only that, the researchers argue the IAU definition is based on a concept that nobody uses in the scientific community. They conducted a literature review of work from the past years and found only one publication that classifies planets based on them clearing their orbits.
And this paper, published in , was based on ideas that have long been disproven. The researchers say that the IAU justified its decision by saying that an object clearing its orbit was a standard used to distinguish planets from asteroids. But the lit review found that this so-called standard wasn't in use anymore — asteroids and planets are distinguished by their geophysical characteristics. So how should a planet be defined? According to the authors of the new study, the answer is simply b — the object is large enough that its gravity pulls it into a ball shape.