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Originally posted by darbeb
i should have created a general planet x thread my question wasn't does it exist.
Originally posted by darbeb
the only place you're supposed to be able to see planet x from right now is antarctica, iour sun and its "sun".
In order to study the sky for warm objects it makes a whole bunch of sense to locate a telescope in an extremely cold environment. After all, if you want to look at the stars, you wouldn't go out with a telescope in the daylight. There's too much visible light in the atmosphere. Likewise, looking at the sky in the infra-red spectrum can be difficult because of the background heat in the atmosphere. But in Antarctica you have a 6-month winter as frigid as anywhere on the globe. You have access to the constellations which are more difficult from the Northern latitudes, like Sagittarius. It's ideal.
Originally posted by darbeb
ok, so, to ellaborate, there must be a reason for planet x's very unusual large elliptical orbit. i mean, it should be the first question someone asks when they view that orbit. a search for "x's elliptical orbit" on google reveals little about this, just that it has such an orbit, not why.