Scientists believe they may have found a new planet in the far reaches of the solar system, up to fo

Soldato
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The title of your thread reads "Scientists believe they may have found a new planet in the far reaches of the solar system, up to four times the mass of badcompany" to me

So there's a planet the size of quite a fat guy in the out reaches of the solar systems?
 
Saw this earlier, amazing if true. Did some calculations and at four times the size of Jupiter it would be half the size required to become a star.
 
Nevermind, misread a post.

Anyway to make use of this post, even if it is that big, it's a gas giant and so far away it may as well NOT be there.
 
The title of your thread reads "Scientists believe they may have found a new planet in the far reaches of the solar system, up to four times the mass of badcompany" to me

So there's a planet the size of quite a fat guy in the out reaches of the solar systems?

it cut end off I pasted in, sorry ?
 
If you mean Nibiru, yes, it's still stupid.

Tyche may not only be disrupting the orbits of comets, it may also overturn an established scientific theory.


Professors Matese and Whitmire first proposed the existence of Tyche to explain why many of these long-period comets were coming from the wrong direction. In their latest paper, published in the February issue of Icarus, the international journal of solar system studies, they report that more than 20 per cent too many of the long-period comets observed since 1898 arrive from a band circling the sky at a higher angle than predicted by the galactic-tide theory.

No other proposal has been put forward to explain this anomaly since it was first suggested 12 years ago. But the Tyche hypothesis does have one flaw. Conventional theory holds that the gas giant should also dislodge comets from the inner Oort Cloud, but these have not been observed.

Professor Matese suggests this may be because these comets have already been tugged out of their orbits and, after several passes through the inner solar system, have faded to the point that they are much harder to detect.
 
gas planet + 'accidental' spark by robot explorer = epic fireworks!!

Not enough oxygen, also far too cold.

Badcompany, those quotes have nothing to do with the Nibiru myth, all it has in common is that it's an object in space that may or may not orbit our sun. It's also far too far away.
 
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Can anyone find that picture where it shows us in comparison to other planets and stars for size?
 
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