May 22, 1998.
Biyo is not really a planet, its an asteroid in the asteroid belt a few km across. It was named after a teacher.
dr josette biyo
No. "Planet" Biyo is not a planet but an asteroid.
I don't think there is a planet Biyo.
Biyo is just a small lump of Rock, in space that's nowhere near large enough to be a planet. It was named after a teacher, who doesn't really go looking for planets.
No. Biyo is an asteroid, not a planet.
Josette Biyo did not discover an asteroid. She had an asteroid named in her honor. It was MIT that named a minor planet/asteroid after Biyo since she won the 2002 Intel Excellence in Teaching award. Only a handful of research astronomers are involved in actually discovering asteroids. Many famous people have had asteroids named after them.
No. Nothing has replaced Pluto. The object known as "Planet Biyo" is actually an asteroid, not a planet.
ambot!
BIYO, named after filipina Dr. Josette Talamera-Biyo by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Lincoln Laboratory, USA. She resides and teaches in Iloilo, Philippines. Biyo is a minor planet between Mars and Jupiter.
Dr. Biyo and his students, that's what my teacher said. One of his student use a telescope to look at that. Someone go to space then its really true. They named it BIO named after BIyO.
Planet BiyoBiyo is an asteriod. it was named after Dr. Josette Talamera biyo a filipina teacher at highschool
Planet Biyo is considered a planet because it meets the criteria set by the International Astronomical Union for planetary classification. It orbits the sun, has enough mass to be round due to gravity, and has cleared its orbit of other debris.