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originally posted by: FlukeSkywalker
Jupiter has so many moons because it represents the 2nd Chakra (big orange ball) and = sex. Lots of "people" (moons) watching...
(sorry I couldn't stay EXACTLY on topic, but I just felt like sharing a nugget of truth that you won't find anywhere else online)
originally posted by: eraTera
Have you ever wondered if the full solar eclipse is unique to Earth?
Well the real answer states that the solar eclipse is 'not' unique to Earth.
An article written on this topic can found here: www.astronomy.com...
Basically, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune and Pluto (dwarf planet) are planets which can experience a full solar eclipse.
But there is something odd here.
1). Jupiter has 69 moons.
2). Saturn has 62 moons.
3). Nepture has 14 moons and 6 inner moons. www.space.com...
4). Pluto -- should this count? Pluto has 5 moons.
It seems these planets get a lot of "chances" or "passes" for their moons to produce a total solar eclipse.
Earth only has 'one' moon and 'one' chance at a full solar eclipse.
Earth succeeds at attaining a full solar eclipse with only one moon. One shot, one kill.
What else is there on Earth? Life. Do these odds seem odd to you? One shot, one solar eclipse + life. No life anywhere else.
Of course our solar eclipse won't last forever. Approximately 570 million years from now, the very last total solar eclipse will occur.
Last solar eclipse article: www.forbes.com...
Do these odds suggest something? Maybe someone left these clues behind? What do you think?
Further, what about one moon full solar eclipses through the galaxy outside our solar system?
originally posted by: FlukeSkywalker
Jupiter has so many moons because it represents the 2nd Chakra (big orange ball) and = sex. Lots of "people" (moons) watching...
(sorry I couldn't stay EXACTLY on topic, but I just felt like sharing a nugget of truth that you won't find anywhere else online)
originally posted by: Ksihkehe
a reply to: eraTera
I'm sure you were trying to imply something there, but I'll be damned if I can figure out what.
Why not just spit out what you are trying to say?
originally posted by: TerminalVelocity
a reply to: eraTera
You placed this thread in the General Conspiracy forum.
Exactly what is the "conspiracy" you are trying to convey here?
originally posted by: chr0naut
originally posted by: eraTera
Have you ever wondered if the full solar eclipse is unique to Earth?
Well the real answer states that the solar eclipse is 'not' unique to Earth.
An article written on this topic can found here: www.astronomy.com...
Basically, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune and Pluto (dwarf planet) are planets which can experience a full solar eclipse.
But there is something odd here.
1). Jupiter has 69 moons.
2). Saturn has 62 moons.
3). Nepture has 14 moons and 6 inner moons. www.space.com...
4). Pluto -- should this count? Pluto has 5 moons.
It seems these planets get a lot of "chances" or "passes" for their moons to produce a total solar eclipse.
Earth only has 'one' moon and 'one' chance at a full solar eclipse.
Earth succeeds at attaining a full solar eclipse with only one moon. One shot, one kill.
What else is there on Earth? Life. Do these odds seem odd to you? One shot, one solar eclipse + life. No life anywhere else.
Of course our solar eclipse won't last forever. Approximately 570 million years from now, the very last total solar eclipse will occur.
Last solar eclipse article: www.forbes.com...
Do these odds suggest something? Maybe someone left these clues behind? What do you think?
Further, what about one moon full solar eclipses through the galaxy outside our solar system?
I do not think it remarkable that there is no life that we know of living on Jupiter. A gas giant planet like Jupiter would have no Earth-like environments. Not one.
Nor is the relationship between frequency of eclipses and the rise of life statistically significant.
It is just a result of physics.
originally posted by: FlukeSkywalker
a reply to: eraTera
The number 69 is no coincidence...
Saturn = Red/Root/Football (oval pigskin)
Jupiter = Orange/Sacral/Basketball (big orange ball)
Mars = Yellow/Solar Plexus/Soccer
Earth = Green/Heart/Tennis (and racquetball) (blue and green earth ball) (played between 2 people or 2 couples)
Venus = Blue/Throat/Baseball
Mercury = Indigo/3rd Eye/Gold (small white ball)
Sun = Pool (the game of pool and also swimming in a pool during summer)
The ball sports become more communicative and less physical the closer they get to the Sun. Uranus, which isn't always visible from Earth represents Hockey (too violent to be a visible planet)...and played on ice because it's so far from the Sun.
(Uranus = Your anus = dudes fisting/fighting each other) (the black puck (your anus) is a ball like the other sports BUT ONLY in 2d, not 3d, because it is too violent)
originally posted by: TerminalVelocity
a reply to: eraTera
I think you're a bit confused.
Earth having a large moon is actually the unusual thing. Look at Venus, almost the same size and mass and no moon.
Jupiter and Saturn having many moons is not unusual. They are massive gas giants who's Hill field extends outward a very long ways, enabling them to capture objects all the time.
Same goes for Neptune and Uranus.
Pluto's "moons" are a bit of a misunderstanding - they all orbit about a common point out in space. In other words, technically Pluto's moons don't really orbit it.
Earth having solar eclipses: why should this shock you or anyone else? If an object orbits about a body that is in orbit about a star, at some points that body will block the sunlight briefly. Just as the Earth blocks the sunlight going to the Moon (called a Lunar Eclipse).
Millions of years ago, our moon was a LOT closer to the Earth and solar eclipses were not only much more common, but were total eclipses most of the time.
originally posted by: jadedANDcynical
What about when one of the outer planets has an eclipse and the moon doing the eclipsing is also experiencing an eclipse?
Eclipseption.