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NASA will host a media teleconference at 1 p.m. EDT on Wednesday, June 3, to discuss the Hubble Space Telescope’s surprising observations of how Pluto’s moons behave, and how these new discoveries are being used in the planning for the New Horizons Pluto flyby in July.
originally posted by: ScientificRailgun
a reply to: ChefSlug
Could be what, exactly? What is "it"? The discovery of Nibiru? Aliens cities on Ceres? Obama's Birth Certificate? Donald Trump's Hairpiece?
Give us a little more to go on.
originally posted by: ScientificRailgun
a reply to: ChefSlug
Could be what, exactly? What is "it"? The discovery of Nibiru? Aliens cities on Ceres? Obama's Birth Certificate? Donald Trump's Hairpiece?
Give us a little more to go on.
originally posted by: alienjuggalo
Holy crap, finally this could actually be "IT" .. I have been waiting a long time for this.
originally posted by: ChefSlug
NASA will host a media teleconference at 1 p.m. EDT on Wednesday, June 3, to discuss the Hubble Space Telescope’s surprising observations of how Pluto’s moons behave, and how these new discoveries are being used in the planning for the New Horizons Pluto flyby in July.
this could be it.....
Source
originally posted by: NightFlight
Pluto is going to turn out to be a defunct neutron star with boatloads of gravitational pull compared to its small physical size? That would explain the gravitational anomalies of the outer reaches of our solar system to some extent.
Or maybe its a brown dwarf.
But, maybe there is an observation post complete with telescopes both sight and radio watching us!?
originally posted by: Krazysh0t
a reply to: NightFlight
If that were true, wouldn't it cause gravitational problems for Neptune since Pluto's orbit passes though Neptune's and they are in close proximity at times?