Planetary symbols are used in astrology and traditionally in astronomy to represent a classical planet (which includes the Sun and the Moon) or one of the modern planets. The classical symbols were also used in alchemy for the seven metals known to the ancients, which were associated with the planets, and in calendars for the seven days of the week associated with the seven planets. The original symbols date to Greco-Roman astronomy; their modern forms developed in the 16th century, and additional symbols would be created later for newly discovered planets.
The seven classical planets, their symbols, days and most commonly associated planetary metals are:
planet | Moon | Mercury | Venus | Sun | Mars | Jupiter | Saturn |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
symbol | |||||||
unicode | ☾ | ☿ | ♀︎ | ☉ | ♂︎ | ♃ | ♄ |
day | Monday | Wednesday | Friday | Sunday | Tuesday | Thursday | Saturday |
metal | silver | quicksilver | copper | gold | iron | tin | lead |
The International Astronomical Union (IAU) discourages the use of these symbols in modern journal articles, and their style manual proposes one- and two-letter abbreviations for the names of the planets for cases where planetary symbols might be used, such as in the headings of tables. The modern planets with their traditional symbols and IAU abbreviations are:
planet | Mercury | Venus | Earth | Mars | Jupiter | Saturn | Uranus | Neptune |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
symbol | ||||||||
initial (IAU) | Me H | V | E | Ma M | J | S | U | N |
The symbols of Venus and Mars are also used to represent female and male in biology following a convention introduced by Carl Linnaeus in the 1750s.
History
Classical planets
The origins of the planetary symbols can be found in the attributes given to classical deities. The Roman planisphere of Bianchini (2nd century, currently in the Louvre, inv. Ma 540) shows the seven planets represented by portraits of the seven corresponding gods, each a bust with a halo and an iconic object or dress, as follows: Mercury has a caduceus and a winged cap; Venus has a necklace and a shining mirror; Mars has a war-helmet and a spear; Jupiter has a laurel crown and a staff; Saturn has a conical headdress and a scythe; the Sun has rays emanating from his head; and the Moon has a crescent atop her head.
- Luna with a crescent
- Mercury with a caduceus
- Venus with a shining mirror
- Sol emanating rays
- Mars with a spear
- Jupiter with a staff
- Saturn with a scythe
The written symbols for Mercury, Venus, Jupiter, and Saturn have been traced to forms found in late Greek papyri.
Early forms are also found in medieval Byzantine codices which preserve horoscopes.
- The symbol for the Moon in a medieval Byzantine (11th c.) ms. The appearance in late Classical times was similar.
- The symbol for Mercury in late Classical (4th c.) and medieval Byzantine (11th c.) mss
- The symbol for Venus in late Classical (4th c.) and medieval Byzantine (11th c.) mss
- The disk with a ray as a symbol for the Sun in late Classical (4th c.) and medieval Byzantine (11th c.) mss
- The symbol for Mars in late Classical (6th c.) and medieval Byzantine (11th c.) mss.
- The symbol for Jupiter in late Classical (4th c.) and medieval Byzantine (11th c.) mss
- The symbol for Saturn in late Classical (4th & 5th c.) and medieval Byzantine (11th c.) mss. Cf. kappa-rho, ⟨κρ⟩.
A diagram in the astronomical compendium by Johannes Kamateros (12th century) closely resembles the 11th-century forms shown above, with the Sun represented by a circle with a single ray, Jupiter by the letter zeta (the initial of Zeus, Jupiter's counterpart in Greek mythology), Mars by a round shield in front of a diagonal spear, and the remaining classical planets by symbols resembling the modern ones, though without the crosses seen in modern versions of Mercury, Venus, Jupiter and Saturn.[citation needed] These crosses first appear in the late 15th or early 16th century. According to Maunder, the addition of crosses appears to be "an attempt to give a savour of Christianity to the symbols of the old pagan gods." The modern forms of the classical planetary symbols are found in a woodcut of the seven planets in a Latin translation of Abu Ma'shar al-Balkhi's De Magnis Coniunctionibus printed at Venice in 1506, represented as the corresponding gods riding chariots.
- Early modern depiction of the planet symbols in an alchemical context (Musaeum Hermeticum, 1678)
- Page spread (with the signs for Mars and Venus) from a 1515 illustrated edition of Abu Ma'shar al-Balkhi's De Magnis Coniunctionibus (in the by translation by Herman of Carinthia, c. 1140, editio princeps by Erhard Ratdolt of Augsburg, 1489).
- Depiction of the planets in a 15th-century Arabic manuscript of Abu Ma'shar's "Book of nativities"
- Medieval planisphere showing the zodiac and the classical planets. The planets are represented by seven faces.
- 16th-century mechanical clock + calendar, using the symbols of the eponymous planets for the days of the week.
- Planetary-metal symbols at the center of the coat of arms of the Royal Society of Chemistry
Earth symbol
Earth is not one of the classical planets, as "planets" by definition were "wandering stars" as seen from Earth's surface. Earth's status as planet is a consequence of heliocentrism in the 16th century. Nonetheless, there is a pre-heliocentric symbol for the world, now used as a planetary symbol for the Earth. This is a circle crossed by two lines, horizontal and vertical, representing the world divided by four rivers into the four quarters of the world (often translated as the four "corners" of the world): . A variant, now obsolete, had only the horizontal line: .
A medieval European symbol for the world – the globus cruciger, (the globe surmounted by a Christian cross) – is also used as a planetary symbol; it resembles an inverted symbol for Venus.
The planetary symbols for Earth are encoded in Unicode at U+1F728 🜨 ALCHEMICAL SYMBOL FOR VERDIGRIS and U+2641 ♁ EARTH.
- The Olympian gods, atop a -shaped world
- Stylized Earth symbol
- A simple globus cruciger
- Three globi crucigeri in the coat of arms of Maschwanden in Switzerland
- In the flag of Uppland, the globe of the globus cruciger is stylized as a T-and-O map,
- In this globus cruciger, the cross is surmounted on a celestial orb with stars
Classical planets
Moon
The crescent shape has been used to represent the Moon since antiquity. In classical antiquity, it is worn by lunar deities (Selene/Luna, Artemis/Diana, Men, etc.) either on the head or behind the shoulders, with its horns pointing upward. The representation of the moon as a simple crescent with the horns pointing to the side (as a heraldic crescent increscent or crescent decrescent) is attested from late Classical times.
The same symbol can be used in a different context not for the Moon itself but for a lunar phase, as part of a sequence of four symbols for "new moon" (U+1F311 🌑︎), "waxing" (U+263D ☽︎), "full moon" (U+1F315 🌕︎) and "waning" (U+263E ☾︎).
- The Moon symbol, representing silver mining, in the municipal arms of Sala in Sweden
- The Moon symbol in the municipal arms of ('Silver Mountain') in Sweden
- Stylized Moon symbol
- The Moon for silver
Mercury
The symbol ☿ for Mercury is a caduceus (a staff intertwined with two serpents), a symbol associated with Mercury / Hermes throughout antiquity. Some time after the 11th century, a cross was added to the bottom of the staff to make it seem more Christian.
- The god Hermes (Mercury) with his caduceus
- The caduceus, copied from pottery
- The caduceus in a tapestry, 3rd century
- Mercury symbol, representing quicksilver mining, in the municipal coat of arms of Stahlberg, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.
- Stylized Mercury symbol
- Mercury for quicksilver
The ☿ symbol has also been used to indicate intersex, transgender, or non-binary gender. A related usage is for the 'worker' or 'neuter' sex among social insects that is neither male nor (due to its lack of reproductive capacity) fully female, such as worker bees. It was also once the designated symbol for hermaphroditic or 'perfect' flowers, but botanists now use ⚥ for these.
Its Unicode codepoint is U+263F ☿ MERCURY.
Venus
The Venus symbol, ♀, consists of a circle with a small cross below it. It has been interpreted as a depiction of the hand-mirror of the goddess, which may also explain Venus's association with the planetary metal copper, as mirrors in antiquity were made of polished copper, though this is not certain. In the Greek Oxyrhynchus Papyri 235, the symbols for Venus and Mercury did not have the cross on the bottom stem, and Venus appears without the cross (⚲) in Johannes Kamateros (12th century).[citation needed]
In botany and biology, the symbol for Venus is used to represent the female sex, alongside the symbol for Mars representing the male sex, following a convention introduced by Linnaeus in the 1750s. Arising from the biological convention, the symbol also came to be used in sociological contexts to represent women or femininity. This gendered association of Venus and Mars has been used to pair them heteronormatively, describing women and men stereotypically as being so different that they can be understood as coming from different planets, an understanding popularized in 1992 by the book titled Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus.
Unicode encodes the symbol as U+2640 ♀ FEMALE SIGN, in the Miscellaneous Symbols block.
- A bronze mirror, of the type associated with Venus
- Cupid holding up a similar mirror to Venus
- The Venus symbol, representing copper mining, in the municipal coat of arms of Falun Municipality in Sweden (1932)
- Raised fist within Venus symbol, used as a symbol of second-wave feminism (1960s)
- Stylized Venus symbol
- Venus for copper
Sun
The modern astronomical symbol for the Sun, the circumpunct (U+2609 ☉ SUN), was first used in the Renaissance. It possibly represents Apollo's golden shield with a boss; it is unknown if it traces descent from the nearly identical Egyptian hieroglyph for the Sun.
Bianchini's planisphere, produced in the 2nd century, shows a circlet with rays radiating from it. In late Classical times, the Sun is attested as a circle with a single ray. A diagram in Johannes Kamateros' 12th century Compendium of Astrology shows the same symbol. This older symbol is encoded by Unicode as U+1F71A 🜚 ALCHEMICAL SYMBOL FOR GOLD in the Alchemical Symbols block. Both symbols have been used alchemically for gold, as have more elaborate symbols showing a disk with multiple rays or even a face.
- A buckler with a sun symbol and dot at center
- Stylized circumpunct symbol for the Sun
- The Sun for gold
- 🜚, the medieval astronomical symbol for the Sun
Mars
The Mars symbol, ♂, is a depiction of a circle with an arrow emerging from it, pointing at an angle to the upper right in Europe and to the upper left in India. It is also the old and obsolete symbol for iron in alchemy. In zoology and botany, it is used to represent the male sex (alongside the astrological symbol for Venus representing the female sex), following a convention introduced by Linnaeus in the 1750s.
The symbol dates from at latest the 11th century, at which time it was an arrow across or through a circle, thought to represent the shield and spear of the god Mars; in the medieval form, for example in the 12th-century Compendium of Astrology by Johannes Kamateros, the spear is drawn across the shield. The Greek Oxyrhynchus Papyri show a different symbol, perhaps simply a spear.
- 3rd-century coin with Mars on the reverse, with lance and shield. The same symbols were used for Athena (Pallas).
- Mars with spear and shield, Pompeii.
- The Mars symbol, representing iron mining, in the municipal coat of arms of Karlskoga in Sweden
- The Mars symbol in the municipal coat of arms of Loppi in Finland
- Mars symbol in the patch for NASA's Viking mission
- Stylized Mars symbol. The spear partly crosses the shield.
- The Mars symbol was used as the symbol for iron
Its Unicode codepoint is U+2642 ♂ MALE SIGN (♂).
Jupiter
The symbol for Jupiter, ♃, was originally a Greek zeta, Ζ, with a stroke indicating that it is an abbreviation (for Zeus, the Greek equivalent of Roman Jupiter).
Its Unicode codepoint is U+2643 ♃ JUPITER.
- Jupiter and Saturn symbols in patch for NASA's Mariner Jupiter-Saturn mission
- Stylized Jupiter symbol
- Jupiter for tin
- A modern form of the monogram reflects its origin in the letter 'Z'
Saturn
Salmasius and earlier attestations show that the symbol for Saturn, ♄, derives from the initial letters (Kappa, rho) of its ancient Greek name Κρόνος (Kronos), with a stroke to indicate an abbreviation. By the time of Kamateros (12th century), the symbol had been reduced to a shape similar to a lower-case letter eta η, with the abbreviation stroke surviving (if at all) in the curl on the bottom-right end.
Its Unicode codepoint is U+2644 ♄ SATURN.
- Emblem of the Fraternitas Saturni, a German magical order founded in 1926
- The Saturn symbol representing lead in the municipal coat of arms of Bleiwäsche, since 1975 part of Bad Wünnenberg, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
- Stylized Saturn symbol
- Saturn for lead (Pb)
- A ligature of kappa ϰ and rho ϱ for Kronos, the ancestor of the symbol for Saturn
Modern discoveries
Uranus
The symbols for Uranus were created shortly after its discovery in 1781. One symbol, ⛢, invented by J. G. Köhler and refined by Bode, was intended to represent the newly discovered metal platinum; since platinum, commonly called white gold, was found by chemists mixed with iron, the symbol for platinum combines the alchemical symbols for iron, ♂, and gold, ☉. Gold and iron are the planetary metals for the Sun and Mars, and so share their symbols. Several orientations were suggested, but an upright arrow is now universal.
Another symbol, , was suggested by Lalande in 1784. In a letter to Herschel, Lalande described it as "a globe surmounted by the first letter of your name". The platinum symbol tends to be used by astronomers, and the monogram by astrologers.
For use in computer systems, the symbols are encoded U+26E2 ⛢ ASTRONOMICAL SYMBOL FOR URANUS and U+2645 ♅ URANUS.
- The planetary symbols as rendered in 1784, including the newly discovered Uranus (left)
- The Uranus platinum symbol on William Herschel's coat of arms (center, blue background)
- Stylized Uranus monogram
Neptune
Several symbols were proposed for Neptune to accompany the suggested names for the planet. Claiming the right to name his discovery, Urbain Le Verrier originally proposed to name the planet for the Roman god Neptune and the symbol of a trident, while falsely stating that this had been officially approved by the French Bureau des Longitudes. In October, he sought to name the planet Leverrier, after himself, and he had loyal support in this from the observatory director, François Arago, who in turn proposed a new symbol for the planet, . However, this suggestion met with resistance outside France, and French almanacs quickly reintroduced the name Herschel for Uranus, after that planet's discoverer Sir William Herschel, and Leverrier for the new planet, though it was used by anglophone institutions. Professor James Pillans of the University of Edinburgh defended the name Janus for the new planet, and proposed a key for its symbol. Meanwhile, Struve presented the name Neptune on December 29, 1846, to the Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences. In August 1847, the Bureau des Longitudes announced its decision to follow prevailing astronomical practice and adopt the choice of Neptune, with Arago refraining from participating in this decision. The planetary symbol was Neptune's trident, with the handle stylized either as a crossed , following Mercury, Venus, Jupiter, Saturn, and the asteroids, or as an orb , following the symbols for Uranus, Earth, and Mars. The crossed variant is the more common today.
For use in computer systems, the symbols are encoded as U+2646 ♆ NEPTUNE and U+2BC9 ⯉ NEPTUNE FORM TWO.
- Athena (Pallas) with her lance and Poseidon (Neptune) with his trident. These weapons became the symbols of the planets Pallas and Neptune, respectively.
- Poseidon with a trident, 6th century BCE
- Poseidon with a trident, 6th century CE
- Stylized Neptune symbol (orb base)
- Stylized Neptune symbol (cross base)
- ⯉, the obsolete Le Verrier monogram for Neptune
Pluto
Pluto was almost universally considered a planet from its discovery in 1930 until its re-classification as a dwarf planet (planetoid) by the IAU in 2006. Planetary geologists and astrologers continue to treat it as a planet. The original planetary symbol for Pluto was , a monogram of the letters P and L. Astrologers generally use a bident with an orb. NASA has used the bident symbol since Pluto's reclassification. These symbols are encoded as U+2647 ♇ PLUTO and U+2BD3 ⯓ PLUTO FORM TWO.
- Pluto holding a bident
- Pluto with a bident
- Pluto symbol stylized as an inverted Mercury
- Pluto compared in size to Earth's moon in a NASA publication
- ⯖, an astrological symbol used for Pluto in Germany and Denmark, representing Pluto's orbit crossing Neptune's
- ⯔, an astrological symbol used in the Mediterranean and Germany. The globe at bottom may be larger or omitted altogether.
Minor planets
In the 19th century, planetary symbols for the major asteroids were also in use, including 1 Ceres (a reaper's sickle, encoded U+26B3 ⚳ CERES), 2 Pallas (a lance, U+26B4 ⚴ PALLAS) and 3 Juno (a sceptre, encoded U+26B5 ⚵ JUNO). Encke (1850) used symbols for 5 Astraea, 6 Hebe, 7 Iris, 8 Flora and 9 Metis in the Berliner Astronomisches Jahrbuch.
In the late 20th century, astrologers abbreviated the symbol for 4 Vesta (the sacred fire of Vesta, encoded U+26B6 ⚶ VESTA), and introduced new symbols for 5 Astraea (, a stylised % sign, shift-5 on the keyboard for asteroid 5), 10 Hygiea encoded U+2BDA ⯚ HYGIEA) and for 2060 Chiron, discovered in 1977 (a key, U+26B7 ⚷ CHIRON). Chiron's symbol was adapted as additional centaurs were discovered; symbols for 5145 Pholus and 7066 Nessus have been encoded in Unicode. The abbreviated Vesta symbol is now universal, and the astrological symbol for Pluto has been used astronomically for Pluto as a dwarf planet.
In the early 21st century, symbols for the trans-Neptunian dwarf planets have come into use, particularly Eris (the hand of Eris, ⯰, but also ⯱), Sedna, Haumea, Makemake, Gonggong, Quaoar and Orcus which are in Unicode. All (except Eris, for which the hand of Eris is a traditional Discordian symbol) were devised by Denis Moskowitz, a software engineer in Massachusetts.
Code point | |||
---|---|---|---|
Ceres | Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ceres symbols. | U+26B3 ⚳ CERES. | |
Pallas | Wikimedia Commons has media related to (2) Pallas symbols. | U+26B4 ⚴ PALLAS. | |
Juno | Wikimedia Commons has media related to (3) Juno symbols. | U+26B5 ⚵ JUNO. | |
Vesta | Wikimedia Commons has media related to (4) Vesta symbols. | U+26B6 ⚶ VESTA. | |
Hygiea | Wikimedia Commons has media related to (10) Hygiea symbols. | U+2BDA ⯚ HYGIEA. | |
Chiron | Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chiron symbols. | U+26B7 ⚷ CHIRON. | |
Pholus | Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pholus symbols. | U+2BDB ⯛ PHOLUS | |
Nessus | Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nessus symbols. | U+2BDC ⯜ NESSUS | |
Orcus | Wikimedia Commons has media related to Orcus symbols. | U+1F77F 🝿 ORCUS | |
Haumea | Wikimedia Commons has media related to Haumea symbols. | U+1F77B 🝻 HAUMEA | |
Quaoar | Wikimedia Commons has media related to Quaoar symbols. | U+1F77E 🝾 QUAOAR | |
Makemake | Wikimedia Commons has media related to Makemake symbols. | U+1F77C 🝼 MAKEMAKE | |
Gonggong | Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gonggong symbols. | U+1F77D 🝽 GONGGONG | |
Eris | Wikimedia Commons has media related to Five-fingered hand of Eris. | U+2BF0 ⯰ ERIS FORM ONE | |
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Eris astrological symbol. | U+2BF1 ⯱ ERIS FORM TWO (used by astrologer Henry Seltzer) | ||
Sedna | Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sedna symbols. | U+2BF2 ⯲ SEDNA |
- Ceres with her sickle
- Athena (Pallas) with her lance (left)
- Juno with her scepter
- Vesta's sacred fire
- Hygiea with her snake (old astr. symbol )
- Petroglyph of Makemake
- Orcus's gape
- A human-headed serpent similar to depictions of Gonggong
- The Hand of Eris from the Principia Discordia
Historical symbols
From 1845 to 1855, many symbols were created for newly discovered asteroids. But by 1851, the spate of discoveries had led to a general abandonment of these symbols in favour of numbering all asteroids instead.
- Astraea with her scales (astronomical symbol or )
- Hebe (mythology) bearing a cup (astr. symbol )
- Iris as the rainbow (astr. symbol )
- Flora dispensing flowers (astr. symbol )
- Metis (astr. symbol )
- Hygiea with her snake (astr. symbol )
- Parthenope (astr. symbol )
- Parthenope with her lyre (astr. symbol )
- Victory (Victoria) with a laurel wreath (astr. symbol or )
- Egeria (astr. symbol ) dictating the laws of Rome to Numa Pompilius
- Peace (Irene) as a freed dove (astr. symbol )
- Peace with wings and an olive branch
- Eunomia (astr. symbol ) at left, as allegory of law and good order; Irene in centre
- Psyche with butterfly wings (astr. symbol )
- Psyche accompanied by a butterfly, and Hermes with a multiply twisted caduceus
- Psyche with butterfly wings, and Charon standing in his lunate boat
- Insignia of the NASA Psyche mission, possibly influenced by the Psyche symbol
- Thetis with a dolphin (astro. symbol )
- Melpomene with a dagger (astr. symbol )
- Fortuna with her wheel (astro. symbol )
- blindfolded Fortuna balanced on a wheel
- Proserpina with a pomegranate (astr. symbol )
- Bellona with a lance and flail (astro. symbol )
- Amphitrite on a shell (astr. symbol )
- Leukothea (astr. symbol ) as goddess of sailors
- Faith (Fides, astr. symbol ) triumphs over idolatry
Moskowitz, who designed symbols for the trans-Neptunian dwarf planets, also designed symbols for the smaller trans-Neptunian objects Varuna, Ixion, and Salacia. Others have proposed symbols for even more trans-Neptunian objects, e.g. Zane Stein for Varda. Although mentioned in the Unicode proposal for the other dwarf planets, they lack broader adoption.
- Salacia riding her hippocamp (symbol )
- Ixion bound to his wheel (symbol or )
- Varuna with his snake-lasso (symbol )
- Varda kindling the stars (symbol )
See also
- Astrological symbol
- Astronomical symbol
- Gender symbol
- Classical planets in Western alchemy
Footnotes
- In order to have one-letter abbreviations for every planet, the IAU recommends 'H' (Hermes) for Mercury and 'M' for Mars. In the unlikely event a satellite were ever discovered around Mercury, its official abbreviation would be H1.
- "It is now possible to trace the medieval symbols for at least four of the five planets to forms that occur in some of the latest papyrus horoscopes ([ P.Oxy. ] 4272, 4274, 4275 [...]). Mercury's is a stylized caduceus. ... The ideal form of Mars' symbol is uncertain, and perhaps not related to the later circle with an arrow through it." — Jones (1999)
- BNF Arabe 2583 folio 15v: Saturn is shown as a black bearded man, kneeling and holding a scythe or axe; Mercury is shown as a scribe holding an open codex; Jupiter as a man of the law wearing a turban; Venus as a lute-player; Mars as a helmeted warrior holding a sword and the head of an enemy.
- "The symbol, the stylized hand mirror of the Goddess Venus, also represents femininity. It has also been used for the element copper: Mirrors had been manufactured from polished copper." — Rehder (2011)
- "In his Systema Naturae (Leyden, 1735) he [Linnaeus] used them with their traditional associations for metals. Their first biological use is in the Linnaean dissertation Plantae hybridae xxx sistit J.J. Haartman (1751) where in discussing hybrid plants Linnaeus denoted the supposed female parent species by the sign ♀, the male parent by the sign ♂, the hybrid by ☿: 'matrem signo ♀, patrem ♂ & plantam hybridam ☿ designavero'. In subsequent publications he retained the signs ♀ and ♂ for male and female individuals but discarded ☿ for hybrids; the last are now indicated by the multiplication sign ×."
- Glossed in the official Unicode code chart as " = Venus = alchemical symbol for copper → 1F469 👩 woman → 1F6BA 🚺 women's symbol".
- The raised fist symbol is attributed to Robin Morgan, in the 1960s: "Morgan designed the universal logo of the women's movement, the woman's symbol centered with a raised fist."
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- Gingerich, Owen (October 1958). The naming of Uranus and Neptune (Report). ASP Leaflets. Vol. 8. Astronomical Society of the Pacific. pp. 9–15. Bibcode:1958ASPL....8....9G.
- "[title not cited]". Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. 1: 287 ff, 334 ff. 1848.
- Hind, J.R. (1847). "Second report of proceedings in the Cambridge Observatory relating to the new planet (Neptune)". Astronomische Nachrichten. 25 (21): 309–314. Bibcode:1847AN.....25..309.. doi:10.1002/asna.18470252102 – via zenodo.org.
- Connaissance des Temps: ou des mouvementes célestes, à l'usage des astronomes [Information on timing: or celestial movements, for the use of astronomers]. Connaissance des Temps (in French). Vol. 1847. Paris, France: Bureau des Longitudes. 1847. p. [unnumbered front matter].
- Metzger, Philip T.; Grundy, W.M.; Sykes, Mark V.; Stern, Alan; Bell, James F. III; Detelich, Charlene E.; et al. (March 2022). "Moons are planets: Scientific usefulness versus cultural teleology in the taxonomy of planetary science". Icarus. 374: 114768. arXiv:2110.15285. doi:10.1016/j.icarus.2021.114768. ISSN 0019-1035. S2CID 240071005.
- Encke, J.F., ed. (1850). Berliner Astronomisches Jahrbuch für 1853. Berlin, DE. p. viii.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Faulks, David (9 May 2006). Proposal to add some western astrology symbols to the UCS (PDF). unicode.org (Report). The Unicode Consortium. p. 4. L2006/06171. Archived (PDF) from the original on June 15, 2018. Retrieved 20 November 2017.
- Faulks, David (15 April 2016). Additional symbols for astrology (PDF). unicode.org (Report). The Unicode Consortium. L2016/16080.
- Miller, Kirk (26 October 2021). Unicode request for dwarf-planet symbols (PDF). unicode.org (Report). L2021/21224.
- Anderson, Deborah (4 May 2022). "Out of this world: New astronomy symbols approved for the Unicode standard". unicode.org (Press release). The Unicode Consortium. Retrieved 6 August 2022.
- In the official code chart.
- Hilton, James L. (14 June 2011). When did the asteroids become minor planets? (Report). Astronomical Almanac Division. Washington, DC: United States Naval Observatory. Archived from the original on August 10, 2018. Retrieved April 24, 2013.
- Bala, Gavin Jared; Miller, Kirk (18 September 2023). "Unicode request for historical asteroid symbols" (PDF). unicode.org. Unicode. Retrieved 26 September 2023.
- Miller, Kirk (18 October 2024). "Preliminary presentation of constellation symbols" (PDF). unicode.org. The Unicode Consortium. Retrieved 22 October 2024.
Planetary symbols are used in astrology and traditionally in astronomy to represent a classical planet which includes the Sun and the Moon or one of the modern planets The classical symbols were also used in alchemy for the seven metals known to the ancients which were associated with the planets and in calendars for the seven days of the week associated with the seven planets The original symbols date to Greco Roman astronomy their modern forms developed in the 16th century and additional symbols would be created later for newly discovered planets The seven classical planets their symbols days and most commonly associated planetary metals are planet Moon Mercury Venus Sun Mars Jupiter Saturnsymbolunicode day Monday Wednesday Friday Sunday Tuesday Thursday Saturdaymetal silver quicksilver copper gold iron tin lead The International Astronomical Union IAU discourages the use of these symbols in modern journal articles and their style manual proposes one and two letter abbreviations for the names of the planets for cases where planetary symbols might be used such as in the headings of tables The modern planets with their traditional symbols and IAU abbreviations are planet Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptunesymbolinitial IAU Me H V E Ma M J S U N The symbols of Venus and Mars are also used to represent female and male in biology following a convention introduced by Carl Linnaeus in the 1750s HistoryClassical planets The origins of the planetary symbols can be found in the attributes given to classical deities The Roman planisphere of Bianchini 2nd century currently in the Louvre inv Ma 540 shows the seven planets represented by portraits of the seven corresponding gods each a bust with a halo and an iconic object or dress as follows Mercury has a caduceus and a winged cap Venus has a necklace and a shining mirror Mars has a war helmet and a spear Jupiter has a laurel crown and a staff Saturn has a conical headdress and a scythe the Sun has rays emanating from his head and the Moon has a crescent atop her head Luna with a crescent Mercury with a caduceus Venus with a shining mirror Sol emanating rays Mars with a spear Jupiter with a staff Saturn with a scythe The written symbols for Mercury Venus Jupiter and Saturn have been traced to forms found in late Greek papyri Early forms are also found in medieval Byzantine codices which preserve horoscopes The symbol for the Moon in a medieval Byzantine 11th c ms The appearance in late Classical times was similar The symbol for Mercury in late Classical 4th c and medieval Byzantine 11th c mss The symbol for Venus in late Classical 4th c and medieval Byzantine 11th c mss The disk with a ray as a symbol for the Sun in late Classical 4th c and medieval Byzantine 11th c mss The symbol for Mars in late Classical 6th c and medieval Byzantine 11th c mss The symbol for Jupiter in late Classical 4th c and medieval Byzantine 11th c mss The symbol for Saturn in late Classical 4th amp 5th c and medieval Byzantine 11th c mss Cf kappa rho kr A diagram in the astronomical compendium by Johannes Kamateros 12th century closely resembles the 11th century forms shown above with the Sun represented by a circle with a single ray Jupiter by the letter zeta the initial of Zeus Jupiter s counterpart in Greek mythology Mars by a round shield in front of a diagonal spear and the remaining classical planets by symbols resembling the modern ones though without the crosses seen in modern versions of Mercury Venus Jupiter and Saturn citation needed These crosses first appear in the late 15th or early 16th century According to Maunder the addition of crosses appears to be an attempt to give a savour of Christianity to the symbols of the old pagan gods The modern forms of the classical planetary symbols are found in a woodcut of the seven planets in a Latin translation of Abu Ma shar al Balkhi s De Magnis Coniunctionibus printed at Venice in 1506 represented as the corresponding gods riding chariots Early modern depiction of the planet symbols in an alchemical context Musaeum Hermeticum 1678 Page spread with the signs for Mars and Venus from a 1515 illustrated edition of Abu Ma shar al Balkhi s De Magnis Coniunctionibus in the by translation by Herman of Carinthia c 1140 editio princeps by Erhard Ratdolt of Augsburg 1489 Depiction of the planets in a 15th century Arabic manuscript of Abu Ma shar s Book of nativities Medieval planisphere showing the zodiac and the classical planets The planets are represented by seven faces 16th century mechanical clock calendar using the symbols of the eponymous planets for the days of the week Planetary metal symbols at the center of the coat of arms of the Royal Society of ChemistryEarth symbol Four quarters of the world symbol for EarthGlobus cruciger symbol for EarthWikimedia Commons has media related to Earth symbols Earth is not one of the classical planets as planets by definition were wandering stars as seen from Earth s surface Earth s status as planet is a consequence of heliocentrism in the 16th century Nonetheless there is a pre heliocentric symbol for the world now used as a planetary symbol for the Earth This is a circle crossed by two lines horizontal and vertical representing the world divided by four rivers into the four quarters of the world often translated as the four corners of the world A variant now obsolete had only the horizontal line A medieval European symbol for the world the globus cruciger the globe surmounted by a Christian cross is also used as a planetary symbol it resembles an inverted symbol for Venus The planetary symbols for Earth are encoded in Unicode at U 1F728 ALCHEMICAL SYMBOL FOR VERDIGRIS and U 2641 EARTH The Olympian gods atop a shaped world Stylized Earth symbolA simple globus cruciger Three globi crucigeri in the coat of arms of Maschwanden in Switzerland In the flag of Uppland the globe of the globus cruciger is stylized as a T and O map In this globus cruciger the cross is surmounted on a celestial orb with starsClassical planetsMoon Decrescent symbol for the MoonEncrescent symbol for the MoonWikimedia Commons has media related to Luna symbols Wikimedia Commons has media related to Crescent moon symbols The crescent shape has been used to represent the Moon since antiquity In classical antiquity it is worn by lunar deities Selene Luna Artemis Diana Men etc either on the head or behind the shoulders with its horns pointing upward The representation of the moon as a simple crescent with the horns pointing to the side as a heraldic crescent increscent or crescent decrescent is attested from late Classical times The same symbol can be used in a different context not for the Moon itself but for a lunar phase as part of a sequence of four symbols for new moon U 1F311 waxing U 263D full moon U 1F315 and waning U 263E The Moon symbol representing silver mining in the municipal arms of Sala in Sweden The Moon symbol in the municipal arms of Silver Mountain in Sweden Stylized Moon symbol The Moon for silver Mercury Crossed caduceus symbol for MercuryWikimedia Commons has media related to Mercury symbols The symbol for Mercury is a caduceus a staff intertwined with two serpents a symbol associated with Mercury Hermes throughout antiquity Some time after the 11th century a cross was added to the bottom of the staff to make it seem more Christian The god Hermes Mercury with his caduceus The caduceus copied from pottery The caduceus in a tapestry 3rd century Mercury symbol representing quicksilver mining in the municipal coat of arms of Stahlberg Rhineland Palatinate Germany Stylized Mercury symbol Mercury for quicksilver The symbol has also been used to indicate intersex transgender or non binary gender A related usage is for the worker or neuter sex among social insects that is neither male nor due to its lack of reproductive capacity fully female such as worker bees It was also once the designated symbol for hermaphroditic or perfect flowers but botanists now use for these Its Unicode codepoint is U 263F MERCURY Venus Crossed copper symbol for Venus The Venus symbol consists of a circle with a small cross below it It has been interpreted as a depiction of the hand mirror of the goddess which may also explain Venus s association with the planetary metal copper as mirrors in antiquity were made of polished copper though this is not certain In the Greek Oxyrhynchus Papyri 235 the symbols for Venus and Mercury did not have the cross on the bottom stem and Venus appears without the cross in Johannes Kamateros 12th century citation needed In botany and biology the symbol for Venus is used to represent the female sex alongside the symbol for Mars representing the male sex following a convention introduced by Linnaeus in the 1750s Arising from the biological convention the symbol also came to be used in sociological contexts to represent women or femininity This gendered association of Venus and Mars has been used to pair them heteronormatively describing women and men stereotypically as being so different that they can be understood as coming from different planets an understanding popularized in 1992 by the book titled Men Are from Mars Women Are from Venus Unicode encodes the symbol as U 2640 FEMALE SIGN in the Miscellaneous Symbols block Wikimedia Commons has media related to Venus symbols A bronze mirror of the type associated with Venus Cupid holding up a similar mirror to Venus The Venus symbol representing copper mining in the municipal coat of arms of Falun Municipality in Sweden 1932 Raised fist within Venus symbol used as a symbol of second wave feminism 1960s Stylized Venus symbol Venus for copperSun Modern astronomical symbol for the SunWikimedia Commons has media related to Sun symbols The modern astronomical symbol for the Sun the circumpunct U 2609 SUN was first used in the Renaissance It possibly represents Apollo s golden shield with a boss it is unknown if it traces descent from the nearly identical Egyptian hieroglyph for the Sun Bianchini s planisphere produced in the 2nd century shows a circlet with rays radiating from it In late Classical times the Sun is attested as a circle with a single ray A diagram in Johannes Kamateros 12th century Compendium of Astrology shows the same symbol This older symbol is encoded by Unicode as U 1F71A ALCHEMICAL SYMBOL FOR GOLD in the Alchemical Symbols block Both symbols have been used alchemically for gold as have more elaborate symbols showing a disk with multiple rays or even a face A buckler with a sun symbol and dot at center Stylized circumpunct symbol for the Sun The Sun for gold the medieval astronomical symbol for the Sun Mars Spear and shield symbol for MarsWikimedia Commons has media related to Mars symbols The Mars symbol is a depiction of a circle with an arrow emerging from it pointing at an angle to the upper right in Europe and to the upper left in India It is also the old and obsolete symbol for iron in alchemy In zoology and botany it is used to represent the male sex alongside the astrological symbol for Venus representing the female sex following a convention introduced by Linnaeus in the 1750s The symbol dates from at latest the 11th century at which time it was an arrow across or through a circle thought to represent the shield and spear of the god Mars in the medieval form for example in the 12th century Compendium of Astrology by Johannes Kamateros the spear is drawn across the shield The Greek Oxyrhynchus Papyri show a different symbol perhaps simply a spear 3rd century coin with Mars on the reverse with lance and shield The same symbols were used for Athena Pallas Mars with spear and shield Pompeii The Mars symbol representing iron mining in the municipal coat of arms of Karlskoga in Sweden The Mars symbol in the municipal coat of arms of Loppi in Finland Mars symbol in the patch for NASA s Viking mission Stylized Mars symbol The spear partly crosses the shield The Mars symbol was used as the symbol for iron Its Unicode codepoint is U 2642 MALE SIGN amp male Jupiter Zeus initial for JupiterWikimedia Commons has media related to Jupiter symbols The symbol for Jupiter was originally a Greek zeta Z with a stroke indicating that it is an abbreviation for Zeus the Greek equivalent of Roman Jupiter Its Unicode codepoint is U 2643 JUPITER Jupiter and Saturn symbols in patch for NASA s Mariner Jupiter Saturn mission Stylized Jupiter symbol Jupiter for tin A modern form of the monogram reflects its origin in the letter Z Saturn Crossed kappa rho ligature for SaturnWikimedia Commons has media related to Saturn symbols Salmasius and earlier attestations show that the symbol for Saturn derives from the initial letters Kappa rho of its ancient Greek name Kronos Kronos with a stroke to indicate an abbreviation By the time of Kamateros 12th century the symbol had been reduced to a shape similar to a lower case letter eta h with the abbreviation stroke surviving if at all in the curl on the bottom right end Its Unicode codepoint is U 2644 SATURN Emblem of the Fraternitas Saturni a German magical order founded in 1926 The Saturn symbol representing lead in the municipal coat of arms of Bleiwasche since 1975 part of Bad Wunnenberg North Rhine Westphalia Germany Stylized Saturn symbol Saturn for lead Pb A ligature of kappa ϰ and rho ϱ for Kronos the ancestor of the symbol for SaturnModern discoveriesUranus Platinum symbol for UranusHerschel monogram for Uranus The symbols for Uranus were created shortly after its discovery in 1781 One symbol invented by J G Kohler and refined by Bode was intended to represent the newly discovered metal platinum since platinum commonly called white gold was found by chemists mixed with iron the symbol for platinum combines the alchemical symbols for iron and gold Gold and iron are the planetary metals for the Sun and Mars and so share their symbols Several orientations were suggested but an upright arrow is now universal Another symbol was suggested by Lalande in 1784 In a letter to Herschel Lalande described it as a globe surmounted by the first letter of your name The platinum symbol tends to be used by astronomers and the monogram by astrologers For use in computer systems the symbols are encoded U 26E2 ASTRONOMICAL SYMBOL FOR URANUS and U 2645 URANUS The planetary symbols as rendered in 1784 including the newly discovered Uranus left The Uranus platinum symbol on William Herschel s coat of arms center blue background Stylized Uranus monogramNeptune Trident symbol for Neptune Several symbols were proposed for Neptune to accompany the suggested names for the planet Claiming the right to name his discovery Urbain Le Verrier originally proposed to name the planet for the Roman god Neptune and the symbol of a trident while falsely stating that this had been officially approved by the French Bureau des Longitudes In October he sought to name the planet Leverrier after himself and he had loyal support in this from the observatory director Francois Arago who in turn proposed a new symbol for the planet However this suggestion met with resistance outside France and French almanacs quickly reintroduced the name Herschel for Uranus after that planet s discoverer Sir William Herschel and Leverrier for the new planet though it was used by anglophone institutions Professor James Pillans of the University of Edinburgh defended the name Janus for the new planet and proposed a key for its symbol Meanwhile Struve presented the name Neptune on December 29 1846 to the Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences In August 1847 the Bureau des Longitudes announced its decision to follow prevailing astronomical practice and adopt the choice of Neptune with Arago refraining from participating in this decision The planetary symbol was Neptune s trident with the handle stylized either as a crossed following Mercury Venus Jupiter Saturn and the asteroids or as an orb following the symbols for Uranus Earth and Mars The crossed variant is the more common today For use in computer systems the symbols are encoded as U 2646 NEPTUNE and U 2BC9 NEPTUNE FORM TWO Athena Pallas with her lance and Poseidon Neptune with his trident These weapons became the symbols of the planets Pallas and Neptune respectively Poseidon with a trident 6th century BCE Poseidon with a trident 6th century CE Stylized Neptune symbol orb base Stylized Neptune symbol cross base the obsolete Le Verrier monogram for NeptunePluto Bident symbol for PlutoPercival Lowell monogram for Pluto Pluto was almost universally considered a planet from its discovery in 1930 until its re classification as a dwarf planet planetoid by the IAU in 2006 Planetary geologists and astrologers continue to treat it as a planet The original planetary symbol for Pluto was a monogram of the letters P and L Astrologers generally use a bident with an orb NASA has used the bident symbol since Pluto s reclassification These symbols are encoded as U 2647 PLUTO and U 2BD3 PLUTO FORM TWO Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pluto symbols Pluto holding a bident Pluto with a bident Pluto symbol stylized as an inverted Mercury Pluto compared in size to Earth s moon in a NASA publication an astrological symbol used for Pluto in Germany and Denmark representing Pluto s orbit crossing Neptune s an astrological symbol used in the Mediterranean and Germany The globe at bottom may be larger or omitted altogether Minor planets Designation of celestial bodies in a German almanac printed 1850 In the 19th century planetary symbols for the major asteroids were also in use including 1 Ceres a reaper s sickle encoded U 26B3 CERES 2 Pallas a lance U 26B4 PALLAS and 3 Juno a sceptre encoded U 26B5 JUNO Encke 1850 used symbols for 5 Astraea 6 Hebe 7 Iris 8 Flora and 9 Metis in the Berliner Astronomisches Jahrbuch In the late 20th century astrologers abbreviated the symbol for 4 Vesta the sacred fire of Vesta encoded U 26B6 VESTA and introduced new symbols for 5 Astraea a stylised sign shift 5 on the keyboard for asteroid 5 10 Hygiea encoded U 2BDA HYGIEA and for 2060 Chiron discovered in 1977 a key U 26B7 CHIRON Chiron s symbol was adapted as additional centaurs were discovered symbols for 5145 Pholus and 7066 Nessus have been encoded in Unicode The abbreviated Vesta symbol is now universal and the astrological symbol for Pluto has been used astronomically for Pluto as a dwarf planet In the early 21st century symbols for the trans Neptunian dwarf planets have come into use particularly Eris the hand of Eris but also Sedna Haumea Makemake Gonggong Quaoar and Orcus which are in Unicode All except Eris for which the hand of Eris is a traditional Discordian symbol were devised by Denis Moskowitz a software engineer in Massachusetts This article contains uncommon Unicode characters Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of the intended characters Unicode characters for minor planets Code pointCeres Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ceres symbols U 26B3 CERES Pallas Wikimedia Commons has media related to 2 Pallas symbols U 26B4 PALLAS Juno Wikimedia Commons has media related to 3 Juno symbols U 26B5 JUNO Vesta Wikimedia Commons has media related to 4 Vesta symbols U 26B6 VESTA Hygiea Wikimedia Commons has media related to 10 Hygiea symbols U 2BDA HYGIEA Chiron Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chiron symbols U 26B7 CHIRON Pholus Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pholus symbols U 2BDB PHOLUSNessus Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nessus symbols U 2BDC NESSUSOrcus Wikimedia Commons has media related to Orcus symbols U 1F77F ORCUSHaumea Wikimedia Commons has media related to Haumea symbols U 1F77B HAUMEAQuaoar Wikimedia Commons has media related to Quaoar symbols U 1F77E QUAOARMakemake Wikimedia Commons has media related to Makemake symbols U 1F77C MAKEMAKEGonggong Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gonggong symbols U 1F77D GONGGONGEris Wikimedia Commons has media related to Five fingered hand of Eris U 2BF0 ERIS FORM ONEWikimedia Commons has media related to Eris astrological symbol U 2BF1 ERIS FORM TWO used by astrologer Henry Seltzer Sedna Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sedna symbols U 2BF2 SEDNACeres with her sickle Athena Pallas with her lance left Juno with her scepter Vesta s sacred fire Hygiea with her snake old astr symbol Petroglyph of Makemake Orcus s gape A human headed serpent similar to depictions of Gonggong The Hand of Eris from the Principia DiscordiaHistorical symbols From 1845 to 1855 many symbols were created for newly discovered asteroids But by 1851 the spate of discoveries had led to a general abandonment of these symbols in favour of numbering all asteroids instead Astraea with her scales astronomical symbol or Hebe mythology bearing a cup astr symbol Iris as the rainbow astr symbol Flora dispensing flowers astr symbol Metis astr symbol Hygiea with her snake astr symbol Parthenope astr symbol Parthenope with her lyre astr symbol Victory Victoria with a laurel wreath astr symbol or Egeria astr symbol dictating the laws of Rome to Numa Pompilius Peace Irene as a freed dove astr symbol Peace with wings and an olive branch Eunomia astr symbol at left as allegory of law and good order Irene in centre Psyche with butterfly wings astr symbol Psyche accompanied by a butterfly and Hermes with a multiply twisted caduceus Psyche with butterfly wings and Charon standing in his lunate boat Insignia of the NASA Psyche mission possibly influenced by the Psyche symbol Thetis with a dolphin astro symbol Melpomene with a dagger astr symbol Fortuna with her wheel astro symbol blindfolded Fortuna balanced on a wheel Proserpina with a pomegranate astr symbol Bellona with a lance and flail astro symbol Amphitrite on a shell astr symbol Leukothea astr symbol as goddess of sailors Faith Fides astr symbol triumphs over idolatry Moskowitz who designed symbols for the trans Neptunian dwarf planets also designed symbols for the smaller trans Neptunian objects Varuna Ixion and Salacia Others have proposed symbols for even more trans Neptunian objects e g Zane Stein for Varda Although mentioned in the Unicode proposal for the other dwarf planets they lack broader adoption Salacia riding her hippocamp symbol Ixion bound to his wheel symbol or Varuna with his snake lasso symbol Varda kindling the stars symbol See alsoAstronomy portalStars portalSpaceflight portalOuter space portalSolar System portalAstrological symbol Astronomical symbol Gender symbol Classical planets in Western alchemyFootnotesIn order to have one letter abbreviations for every planet the IAU recommends H Hermes for Mercury and M for Mars In the unlikely event a satellite were ever discovered around Mercury its official abbreviation would be H1 It is now possible to trace the medieval symbols for at least four of the five planets to forms that occur in some of the latest papyrus horoscopes P Oxy 4272 4274 4275 Mercury s is a stylized caduceus The ideal form of Mars symbol is uncertain and perhaps not related to the later circle with an arrow through it Jones 1999 BNF Arabe 2583 folio 15v Saturn is shown as a black bearded man kneeling and holding a scythe or axe Mercury is shown as a scribe holding an open codex Jupiter as a man of the law wearing a turban Venus as a lute player Mars as a helmeted warrior holding a sword and the head of an enemy The symbol the stylized hand mirror of the Goddess Venus also represents femininity It has also been used for the element copper Mirrors had been manufactured from polished copper Rehder 2011 In his Systema Naturae Leyden 1735 he Linnaeus used them with their traditional associations for metals Their first biological use is in the Linnaean dissertation Plantae hybridae xxx sistit J J Haartman 1751 where in discussing hybrid plants Linnaeus denoted the supposed female parent species by the sign the male parent by the sign the hybrid by matrem signo patrem amp plantam hybridam designavero In subsequent publications he retained the signs and for male and female individuals but discarded for hybrids the last are now indicated by the multiplication sign Linnaeus s first general use of the signs of and was in his Species Plantarum 1753 written between 1746 and 1752 and surveying concisely the whole plant kingdom as then known In order to save space Linnaeus employed the astronomical symbols of Saturn Jupiter Mars and the Sun to denote woody herbaceous perennial biennial and annual plants respectively ed the orbital periods of Saturn Jupiter Mars and Earth about the Sun are 29 12 2 and 1 year and Mercury Mars and Venus for the hermaphrodite male and female conditions Later in his Mantissa Plantarum 1767 and Mantissa Plantarum altera 1771 Linnaeus regularly used and for male female and hermaphrodite flowers respectively Their aptness made them easy to remember and their convenience led to their general acceptance in zoology as well as botany Koelreuter found them especially convenient when recording his experiments in hybridization as late as 1778 he used the sign to denote a hybrid plant Stearn 1962 Glossed in the official Unicode code chart as Venus alchemical symbol for copper 1F469 woman 1F6BA women s symbol The raised fist symbol is attributed to Robin Morgan in the 1960s Morgan designed the universal logo of the women s movement the woman s symbol centered with a raised fist ReferencesThe IAU Style Manual PDF 1989 p 27 plaque planisphere de Bianchini Paris Louvre Retrieved 2022 07 23 Jones Alexander 1999 Astronomical Papyri from Oxyrhynchus P Oxy 4133 4300a American Philosophical Society ISBN 978 0 87169 233 7 Neugebauer Otto 1975 A History of Ancient Mathematical Astronomy pp 788 789 ISBN 0 387 06995 X Maunder 1934 Maunder 1934 239 Solar System The English Cyclopaedia of Arts and Sciences Vol VII VIII 1861 van den Akker Olga B A 2012 Reproductive Health Psychology Wiley Blackwell p 40 ISBN 978 1 119 96747 7 via Google Books Bingham C T 1903 The Fauna of British India Including Ceylon and Burma Hymenoptera Vol II Ants and Cuckoo Wasps London Taylor and Francis p v Stearn William T May 1962 The origin of the male and female symbols of biology PDF Taxon 11 4 109 113 doi 10 2307 1217734 ISSN 0040 0262 JSTOR 1217734 Simpson Niki 2010 Botanical symbols A new symbol set for new images Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 162 2 117 129 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8339 2009 01021 x Rehder Dieter 2011 Chemistry in Space From interstellar matter to the origin of life Wiley VCH Schott G D December 2005 Sex symbols ancient and modern their origins and iconography on the pedigree The British Medical Journal 331 7531 1509 1510 doi 10 1136 bmj 331 7531 1509 ISSN 0959 8138 PMC 1322246 PMID 16373733 Brammer John Paul 2020 02 10 Love hate reads Men are from Mars Women are from Venus revisited VICE Retrieved 2023 04 17 Morin Amy 2016 08 19 Why the Mars and Venus conversations must end The truth about gender differences in the workplace Forbes Retrieved 2023 04 17 U 2640 PDF unicode org Report Unicode code chart Vol U 26 The Unicode Consortium Activism robinmorgan net September 8 2023 Retrieved 2024 01 02 Neugebauer Otto Van Hoesen H B 1987 Greek Horoscopes pp 1 159 163 Maunder A S D August 1934 The origin of the symbols of the planets The Observatory Vol 57 pp 238 247 Bibcode 1934Obs 57 238M Evans James 1998 The History amp Practice of Ancient Astronomy Oxford University Press U S p 350 ISBN 0 19 509539 1 Bode J E 1784 Von dem neu entdeckten Planeten On the newly discovered planets in German Beim Verfaszer pp 95 96 Bibcode 1784vdne book B via Internet Archive Gould B A 1850 Report on the history of the discovery of Neptune Smithsonian Institution p 5 via Archive org Herschel Francisca August 1917 The meaning of the symbol H o for the planet Uranus The Observatory Vol 40 p 306 Bibcode 1917Obs 40 306H Iancu Laurentiu 14 August 2009 Proposal to encode the astronomical symbol for Uranus PDF unicode org Report The Unicode Consortium L2009 09300 Littmann Mark Standish E M 2004 Planets Beyond Discovering the outer Solar System Courier Dover Publications p 50 ISBN 0 486 43602 0 Pillans James 1847 Ueber den Namen des neuen Planeten Regarding the names of the new planets Astronomische Nachrichten in German 25 26 389 392 Bibcode 1847AN 25 389 doi 10 1002 asna 18470252602 via Google Books Baum Richard Sheehan William 2003 In Search of Planet Vulcan The ghost in Newton s clockwork universe Basic Books pp 109 110 ISBN 0 7382 0889 2 Schumacher H C 1846 Name des Neuen Planeten Names of the new planets Astronomische Nachrichten in German 25 81 82 Bibcode 1846AN 25 81L doi 10 1002 asna 18470250603 Gingerich Owen October 1958 The naming of Uranus and Neptune Report ASP Leaflets Vol 8 Astronomical Society of the Pacific pp 9 15 Bibcode 1958ASPL 8 9G title not cited Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 1 287 ff 334 ff 1848 Hind J R 1847 Second report of proceedings in the Cambridge Observatory relating to the new planet Neptune Astronomische Nachrichten 25 21 309 314 Bibcode 1847AN 25 309 doi 10 1002 asna 18470252102 via zenodo org Connaissance des Temps ou des mouvementes celestes a l usage des astronomes Information on timing or celestial movements for the use of astronomers Connaissance des Temps in French Vol 1847 Paris France Bureau des Longitudes 1847 p unnumbered front matter Metzger Philip T Grundy W M Sykes Mark V Stern Alan Bell James F III Detelich Charlene E et al March 2022 Moons are planets Scientific usefulness versus cultural teleology in the taxonomy of planetary science Icarus 374 114768 arXiv 2110 15285 doi 10 1016 j icarus 2021 114768 ISSN 0019 1035 S2CID 240071005 Encke J F ed 1850 Berliner Astronomisches Jahrbuch fur 1853 Berlin DE p viii a href wiki Template Cite book title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Faulks David 9 May 2006 Proposal to add some western astrology symbols to the UCS PDF unicode org Report The Unicode Consortium p 4 L2006 06171 Archived PDF from the original on June 15 2018 Retrieved 20 November 2017 Faulks David 15 April 2016 Additional symbols for astrology PDF unicode org Report The Unicode Consortium L2016 16080 Miller Kirk 26 October 2021 Unicode request for dwarf planet symbols PDF unicode org Report L2021 21224 Anderson Deborah 4 May 2022 Out of this world New astronomy symbols approved for the Unicode standard unicode org Press release The Unicode Consortium Retrieved 6 August 2022 In the official code chart Hilton James L 14 June 2011 When did the asteroids become minor planets Report Astronomical Almanac Division Washington DC United States Naval Observatory Archived from the original on August 10 2018 Retrieved April 24 2013 Bala Gavin Jared Miller Kirk 18 September 2023 Unicode request for historical asteroid symbols PDF unicode org Unicode Retrieved 26 September 2023 Miller Kirk 18 October 2024 Preliminary presentation of constellation symbols PDF unicode org The Unicode Consortium Retrieved 22 October 2024 Wikimedia Commons has media related to Planet symbols Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alchemical symbols