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ASTRONOMY: Planet Nine - is there an extra planet in our solar system? Will a habitable "2nd Earth" planet ever be found? (Oh, and while we are at it, why is Pluto no longer considered a planet??)
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James, Group Founder
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Jul 03, 2017 04:53AM

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Investigative reporter Linda Moulton Howe discussed 'Planet Nine,' climate change, strange fogs or ectoplasm, and an unexplained sighting. The first week of October brought new headlines about the hypothetical Planet Nine and its connection to a newfound dwarf planet nicknamed "Goblin" located in the Kuiper Belt surrounding our solar system. Linda interviewed astronomer Michael Brown, Ph.D. at USC in California, who suggested that Planet Nine could be 20 times further out than Neptune, and similar in size to that gaseous planet. This planetary body that some have referred to as Planet X is not the same as 'Nibiru' that Zecharia Sitchin and others have reported, which Brown doubts even exists. "If it (Nibiru) were really coming, it would be so bright that you could see it with binoculars...We wouldn’t be able to have a NASA conspiracy keeping it secret, and it would have been visible to every backyard astronomer."

More Evidence That Planet 9X — At Least Seven Times Earth’s Mass — Is Hidden in Kuiper Belt! https://www.earthfiles.com/2018/10/25...
“It’s seven times the mass of our planet and it’s 500 times further away from the sun than Earth.” – Michael Brown, Ph.D., Astronomer, Cal Tech, Pasadena, California


HONOLULU — When scientists search for alien planets, they get a special thrill when they find one that seems to reflect our own world back to us.
TOI 700 d is the newest member of that elite club. The planet was discovered courtesy of NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, or TESS, as one of three worlds in a distant solar system. Unlike its neighbors — and the vast majority of planets scientists have identified so far — it seems to be about the same size as Earth and to orbit its star at a distance that would allow water to remain liquid on its surface. The discovery was announced here on Jan. 6 at the 235th meeting of the American Astronomical Society.
As an Earth-size planet in its star's habitable zone, TOI 700 d is a big deal for scientists. "We really want to understand the question, could life form on these planets around very small stars? And this is kind of a nice big step towards that goal," Joseph Rodriguez, an astronomer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Massachusetts, told Space.com. "We're nowhere near it yet and we're talking, probably, decades, if not much, much longer to answer this question. but we're making steps towards arguably one of the biggest questions in science — and not just science but philosophy, religion and a lot of other things."

HONOLULU — When scientists se..."
Needless to say, your local heretic disagrees with the possibility of it being an Earth equivalent. If you follow the arguments of my ebook, "Planetary Formation and Biogenesis" they may have found a waterworld. The argument comes from the fact that the rocks that made up Earth had to be strongly heat-processed during star formation to get our continents, and, for that matter, to get our atmosphere. The temperature profile of an average red dwarf during that period has that temperature very close to the star (because the star is so small). The habitable zone is somewhat further out, mainly because the star is not a point, and the luminosity function differs from the initial heating. In my opinion, it would have formed with a lot of ice, which would now melt. Of course it may not be average, but the two planets around Kapteyn's star (another red dwarf) are exactly where I predicted two ice planets to be (except the ice will have melted).

And couldn't land be created much like islands are artificially created in the UAE?
And if the planet is icy, well humans have shown we are masters of heating things up...



Why's that?
You need the right sort of star to sustain Earth-like life?

Most will not agree with that, and think it will be rocky if it is about the same size as Earth and inside any giants. However, we have found some in what are thought to be the rocky zone that have a density more like water, so they can't be. I should add that there will be exceptions to the above - I am just saying what I think is the most probable.


What is on a planet is essentially what it accreted to start with, and as you say, since this was all mixed up, it started to separate out. Isotope evidence is fairly clear that asteroids and comets added only minor amounts of anything. The evidence is that Mars only lost about 80% of its atmosphere, which may seem a lot until you realise that as far as nitrogen goes the remaining 20% is so small it could never have had much. My personal view is most of what little atmosphere it ever had is actually buried.


he evidence for atmospheric pressure and water flowing on Mars was that it was intermittent, but no spot ran for much more than 100,000 yrs continuously. If anyone wants to see the scientific referecnes to back up these statements, they are listed in my ebook "Planetary Formation and Biogenesis". (over 600 papers referenced and reviewed.)