Zoozve (pronounced zooz-vee or zooz-vay)
The
orthodox clipping of 524522 Zoozve (provisional designation 2002 VE68), a
temporary quasi-satellite (or quasi-moon and technically an asteroid) of the
planet Venus.
2024 (sort
of): From an accidental coining by a graphic artist preparing a rendering of a
stylized poster of the solar system, the asteroid's provisional designation (2002VE)
misread and written as ZOOZVE (the text of the descriptors all in upper case). Another suggested pronunciation is jeuj-vey (as in zhuzh) but zooz-vee & zooz-vay seem more mnemonic. Zoozve is a proper noun; the noun plural is
zoozves. Although Zoozve is a unique object,
in the solar system, doubtlessly there are many more quasi-moons and zoozve (with
an initial lower case) may emerge as the generic term, thus the need for the
noun plural.
The Poster.
Zoozve
first came to wider public attention early in 2024 when the tale was revealed
in a podcast produced by Latif Nasser (b 1986) of New York public radio station
WNYC’s RadioLab. The story was triggered
when he first noticed a detail on a poster of the solar system: a moon of Venus
called Zoozve. There are many moons in
the solar system but Dr Nasser holds a PhD from Harvard's History of Science
department and knew the astronomical orthodoxy was that Venus “has no moons”, something some rapid research
confirmed so he contacted Elizabeth Landau (b 1975), a member of the US
National Aeronautics and Space Administration's (NASA) communications, his not unreasonable assumption being if anyone should know about what’s in space, it
was the folk at NASA. After consulting
the charts, Ms Landau concluded there was such an object but that it wasn’t a moon; it was a quasi-moon which, discovered in 2002, after 2004 when its dual orbits
were first tracked, enjoyed the distinction of being the first quasi-moon ever
found. What appeared on the poster as “Zoozve”
was the graphic artist’s misreading of “2002VE”, a designation typical of the naming
conventions used in astronomy.
Poster close-up.
The
distinction between a moon and a quasi moon is the former have “a primary anchor”: Although the Earth’s
Moon of course revolves around the Sun as well as this planet, the solar
relationship is a by-product of Earth’s gravitational pull. A quasi-moon is one with two distinct paths
of rotation, one around its (temporary) planet and one around the Sun. There are implications in that beyond the
cosmic phenomenon being a scientific curiosity: quasi-moons eventually will become
detached (astronomers seem to like “flung-off”
which is more illustrative) which means they could become objects which could
crash into Earth. Zoozve is some 240m
(785 feet) in diameter and the conventional calculation is an impact with Earth
would release energy equivalent to some 69,000 A-bombs with the yield (15 kilotons
of TNT) of the device dropped on Hiroshima in 1945. Zoozve is in the last few hundred years of
its eight millennia-odd attachment to Venus and modelling suggests it is
unlikely to hit earth when it does become adrift but such calculations are
acknowledged to be “ultimately imprecise”
and, as mentioned, there are doubtless many more; the universe is a violent and
destructive place. Quasi-moons had been
speculated to exist for almost a century before 2002VE was named and since then
it’s been discovered Earth has a few of its own.
2002VE was discovered
in 2002 by Brian Skiff (b 1953), a research scientist at Arizona’s Lowell
Observatory in Arizona and because he made no attempt to give it a “proper”
name, it was allocated the procedural 2002VE86 (“proper” names granted usually
only after an object has attracted sufficient interest to generate academic
papers). Dr Nasser however was so
charmed by the tale of 2002VE that he submitted an application to the Working
Group Small Bodies Nomenclature (WGSBN) of the International Astronomical Union
(IAU) the committee responsible for assigning names to minor planets and
comets. What he wanted was for 2002VE to
become Zoozve but it transpired there were naming "rules" including:
(1) 16
characters or less in length
(2) Preferably
one word
(3) Pronounceable
(in some language)
(4) Non-offensive
(5) Not too
similar to an existing name of a Minor Planet or natural Planetary satellite.
(6) The
names of individuals or events principally known for political or military
activities are unsuitable until 100 years after the death of the individual or
the occurrence of the event.
(7) Names
of pet animals are discouraged
(8) Names
of a purely or principally commercial nature are not allowed.
(9) Objects that approach or cross Earth's orbit (so called Near Earth Asteroids) are generally given mythological names.
Mar-a-Lago, Palm Beach, Florida.
Because of
2002VE’s proximity to earth, the need to have the name rooted in mythology was
obviously the most onerous hurdle to overcome and it is a common-sense stipulation,
imposed to avoid controversy on Earth: Imagine the fuss if quasi-moon 524522
Lindsay Lohan ended up crashing into Trump Tower or Mar-a-Lago? There would be litigation.
Added to
which, the IAU have the reputation of being a bunch of humorless cosmic clerks,
something like the Vogons ("...not actually evil, but bad-tempered,
bureaucratic, officious and callous.") in Douglas Adams’
(1952–2001) Hitchhiker's Guide to the
Galaxy (1979-1992): they were the crew who decided Pluto should no longer be thought a
planet because of some tiresome technical distinction. Although lacking the lovely rings of Saturn
(a feature shared on a smaller scale by Jupiter, Uranus & Neptune), Pluto
is the most charming of all because it’s so far away; desolate, lonely and
cold, it's the solar system’s emo. If
for no other reason, it should be a planet in tribute to the scientists who,
for decades during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries,
calculated possible positions and hunted for the elusive orb. In an example of Donald Rumsfeld's (1932–2021;
US secretary of defense 1975-1977 & 2001-2006) “unknown knowns”, the proof was
actually obtained as early as 1915 but it wasn’t until 1930 that was
realized. In an indication of just how
far away Pluto lies, since the 1840s when equations based on Newtonian
mechanics were first used to predict the position of the then “undiscovered”
planet, it has yet to complete even one orbit of the Sun, one Plutonian year
being 247.68 years long. Unromantic, the
IAU remains unmoved. Still, there have
been exceptions to the rule and it emerged some of the “rules” are actually “guidelines”
and the WGSBN was so impressed by the serendipitous tale that a majority of the
committee’s eleven voting members cast their ballots for Zoozve so, on 5
February 2024, Radiolab was able to announce the IAU officially had re-designated 2002VE as 524522 Zoozve.
Truly unique
words (in the sense of one-off spellings) happen for many reasons. Those intended for global use as trademarked
company or product names really do have to be unique and sufficient different to
just about every other word to ensure there are no legal maneuverings contesting
their registration which is how we ended up with “Optus” (used since 1991 by the
Australian telecommunications company (TelCo) which is now a subsidiary of
Singapore-based TelCo Singtel) and Stellantis (a conglomerate created by the
merger of the Italian Fiat Chrysler Automobiles (FCA) and the French PSA Group
(comprising the Peugeot, Citroën, DS, Opel and Vauxhall brands)). While on first hearing, to many, Optus and Stellantis
probably sounded like mistakes, some words really were just the result of
error. Apron (an article of clothing
worn over the front of the torso and at least part of the legs and donned by (1)
cooks, butchers and others as protection from spills and (2) Freemasons as part
of their regalia worn during their cultish rituals was from the Middle English naperoun & napron, from the Old French napperon,
a diminutive of nappe (tablecloth),
from the Latin mappa (napkin). “Napron”
became “apron” by the process of linguistic assimilation (ie “a napron” becoming “apron” because of the evolution of pronunciation.
Some become legion as accidental coinings only for it to turn out there’s a pedigree. Warren Harding (1865-1921; US President 1921-1923), during the 1920 presidential campaign, used “normalcy” instead of “normality” after a George W Bush-like (George XLIII, b 1946; US president 2001-2009) mangling of the written text, something understandable because the section with the offending word was almost aggressively alliterative:
“America’s present
need is not heroics, but healing; not nostrums, but normalcy; not revolution,
but restoration; not agitation, but adjustment; not surgery, but serenity; not
the dramatic, but the dispassionate; not experiment, but equipoise; not
submergence in internationality, but sustainment in triumphant nationality.”
In saying
"normalcy" he may have misspoken or perhaps Harding liked the word;
questioned afterwards he said he found it in a dictionary which probably was
true although whether his discovery came before or after the speech wasn't
explored. Although Harding’s choice was
much-derided at the time, normalcy had certainly existed since at least 1857,
originally as a technical term from geometry meaning the "mathematical
condition of being at right angles, state or fact of being normal in
geometry" but subsequently it had appeared in print as a synonym of
normality on several occasions. Still,
it was hardly in general use though Harding gave it a boost and it’s not since
gone extinct, now with little complaint except from the most linguistically
fastidious who insist the use in geometry remains the only meaning and all
subsequent uses are mistakes.
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