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abeverage
No Red Kachina or Nibiru comments yet? Surprising really!
pavil
abeverage
No Red Kachina or Nibiru comments yet? Surprising really!
I was waiting for them too.
Pretty cool find, nonetheless.
Getting crazy at the level of detail we can now see at such distances. We have even seen cloud patterns on at least one Exo Planet.
Why?
The article didn't say where it was located relative to alpha centauri or other neighboring stars so with the available information, the leading candidate is our solar system.
InverseLookingGlass
reply to post by SasquatchHunter
186,282.4 mi/sec * 3600 sec * 24* 365 = 5874589152000 mi/yr *80 = 46996716160000 miles
15000 m/h = 131400000 mi/yr
357661 years and change. (I need a dum dum award for that original math work)
Still a drop in the bucket in cosmic time.
The article didn't say where it was located relative to alpha centauri or other neighboring stars so with the available information, the leading candidate is our solar system. There is no physical model for a planet to form outside a solar system nor do I put any creedance in the age estimate of the body. So in lieu of more data, the origin is most likely to be solar system. The trajectory determination should be the test of this model.
HooHaa
Nibiru! They finally found it...
Seriously, if it doesn't orbit a sun, doesn't that make it a big ass meteor or asteroid?
What is the criteria to call a body a planet?
HooHaa
Nibiru! They finally found it...
Seriously, if it doesn't orbit a sun, doesn't that make it a big ass meteor or asteroid?
What is the criteria to call a body a planet?
SasquatchHunter
InverseLookingGlass
I have to wonder where this planet came from. Without any additional information, I would say the most likely source is our solar system.
If the planet was traveling a mere 15,000 mph straight away from Earth, it would only take 45,000 years to get to it's current position. 80 light years is actually pretty close.
Observations over a period of years should yield a rough trajectory. Should be interesting.
What? How did you arrive at those figures. If it was traveling 22k mph it would take like 2,560,000 years to travel 80 light years which BTW is most definitely NOT CLOSE. Either way why would you speculate its origin as our solar system?