All those years of astrology, wasted.

Astronomers have voted to strip Pluto of its status as a planet.

About 2,500 scientists meeting in Prague have adopted historic new guidelines that see the small, distant world demoted to a secondary category.

The researchers said Pluto failed to dominate its orbit around the Sun in the same way as the other planets.

The International Astronomical Union’s (IAU) decision means textbooks will now have to describe a Solar System with just eight major planetary bodies.

Pluto, which was discovered in 1930 by Clyde Tombaugh, will be referred to as a “dwarf planet”.

There is a recognition that the demotion is likely to upset the public which has become accustomed to a particular view of the Solar System.

“I have a slight tear in my eye today, yes; but at the end of the day we have to describe the Solar System as it really is, not as we would like it to be,” said Professor Iwan Williams, chair of the IAU panel that has been working over recent months to define the term “planet”.

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