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1:11 PM
@raf This is a very interesting question, and this chat room is really quiet. I think you can consider posting it here in Astronomy as a real question post. These are astronomical symbols and astronomers may be the ones to use them.
For questions about NASA Space SE might be better though, so I don't know. If you can use unicode then compart.com is excellent! compart.com/en/unicode/U+2643 gives ♃ for example
there's even cuniform! compart.com/en/unicode/U+1205C
 
raf
1:50 PM
Thanks for the site.
Actually I wasn't sure if it's on-topic or not in Astronomy. That's why I have asked it in TeX: https://tex.stackexchange.com/q/570698/114006
Should/Can I repost this question here too to get more effective solutions?
 
 
9 hours later…
10:24 PM
4
Q: Packages for standard solar system (astronomical) symbols

rafI want to get this specific set of symbols through some latex packages. Photo source: https://solarsystem.nasa.gov/resources/680/solar-system-symbols/ I have tried using the packages mathabx and wasysym. The package mathabx gives my desired earth symbol and the symbols font is scaled properly wh...

@raf Oh there it is! It may catch a few more passing eyes this way.
I wish there were a better way to cross-advertise questions of interest in multiple topics but except for using chat like this and the occasional HNQ (hot network question) there isn't yet.
Cross-posting of the identical question in multiple sits is strongly discouraged because it leads to answer fragmentation among other reasons. However, if you can think of a related question about these symbols you can ask in Astronomy and include a link to your TeX SE question
Their history, frequency of use in technical publication, how do publishers handle them when submitting articles... anything you can think of so that the question would have somewhat different answers than your current question.
 

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