Planet 9 ( Archived) (15)

Jan 22, 2016 10:21 AM CST Planet 9
I was on planet 9 last night....drinking ....cheers
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Jan 22, 2016 10:24 AM CST Planet 9
galrads
galradsgalradsDublin, Ohio USA2,264 Threads 279 Polls 36,283 Posts
pedro27: I was on planet 9 last night.... ....


Did you orbit the sun at least once while you were there?
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Jan 22, 2016 10:24 AM CST Planet 9
pedalguy59
pedalguy59pedalguy59Burlington, Ontario Canada28 Threads 1 Polls 6,976 Posts
pedro27: I was on planet 9 last night.... ....


You were not alone. re: see thread below.laugh
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Jan 22, 2016 10:29 AM CST Planet 9
galrads: Did you orbit the sun at least once while you were there?
they reakon 20,000 years for a full orbit....plus no one has seen the planet 9...so it could be a load of cods wallop
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Jan 22, 2016 11:00 AM CST Planet 9
tomcatwarne
tomcatwarnetomcatwarneOcean City, Plumouth, Devon, England UK289 Threads 7 Polls 17,106 Posts
pedro27: they reakon 20,000 years for a full orbit....plus no one has seen the planet 9...so it could be a load of cods wallop


Ah the newly discovered planet in the solar system.
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Jan 22, 2016 11:12 AM CST Planet 9
tomcatwarne
tomcatwarnetomcatwarneOcean City, Plumouth, Devon, England UK289 Threads 7 Polls 17,106 Posts
tomcatwarne: Ah the newly discovered planet in the solar system.


Is there a ninth planet in our solar system?
21 January 2016 Last updated at 15:29 GMT
Astronomers in the United States say they may have discovered a new planet in the solar system.
Nicknamed "Planet Nine" by researchers at the California Institute of Technology, there are no direct observations to confirm its presence billions of miles beyond Neptune.
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Jan 22, 2016 11:14 AM CST Planet 9
Ccincy
CcincyCcincyCincinnati, Ohio USA77 Threads 20,535 Posts
I've always heard it being on cloud 9.happy place I must've missed something along the way.giggle
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Jan 22, 2016 11:14 AM CST Planet 9
pedalguy59
pedalguy59pedalguy59Burlington, Ontario Canada28 Threads 1 Polls 6,976 Posts
tomcatwarne: Is there a ninth planet in our solar system?
21 January 2016 Last updated at 15:29 GMT
Astronomers in the United States say they may have discovered a new planet in the solar system.
Nicknamed "Planet Nine" by researchers at the California Institute of Technology, there are no direct observations to confirm its presence billions of miles beyond Neptune.


Perfectthumbs up I will select an appropriate American Woman
to send there.
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Jan 22, 2016 11:26 AM CST Planet 9
galrads
galradsgalradsDublin, Ohio USA2,264 Threads 279 Polls 36,283 Posts
pedro27: they reakon 20,000 years for a full orbit....plus no one has seen the planet 9...so it could be a load of cods wallop



Was just thinking about how we're enabled to possibly see planet nine billions of miles away.
How long it would take the Sun's light to get there and then how much time to reflect to earth?

It takes 8 minutes 20 seconds for the sun's light to travel 92.96 million miles to earth. Would we continue to see the sun for 8 minutes 20 seconds after it went completely dark?

So what happens if after the the Sun's light hits planet nine, blows up to smithereens? Would we still continue to see planet nine a day or a week or a year after it blows up? ... dunno
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Jan 22, 2016 11:29 AM CST Planet 9
tomcatwarne: Ah the newly discovered planet in the solar system.


they probaly discovered it but it hasnt been seen...sky news reports
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Jan 22, 2016 11:32 AM CST Planet 9
chatonlyman2
chatonlyman2chatonlyman2North Bay, Ontario Canada27 Threads 7 Polls 6,600 Posts
galrads: Was just thinking about how we're enabled to possibly see planet nine billions of miles away.
How long it would take the Sun's light to get there and then how much time to reflect to earth?

It takes 8 minutes 20 seconds for the sun's light to travel 92.96 million miles to earth. Would we continue to see the sun for 8 minutes 20 seconds after it went completely dark?

So what happens if after the the Sun's light hits planet nine, blows up to smithereens? Would we still continue to see planet nine a day or a week or a year after it blows up? ...
The answer is yes you can observe a light source that is no longer there at the speed of light.
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Jan 22, 2016 11:33 AM CST Planet 9
galrads: Was just thinking about how we're enabled to possibly see planet nine billions of miles away.
How long it would take the Sun's light to get there and then how much time to reflect to earth?

It takes 8 minutes 20 seconds for the sun's light to travel 92.96 million miles to earth. Would we continue to see the sun for 8 minutes 20 seconds after it went completely dark?

So what happens if after the the Sun's light hits planet nine, blows up to smithereens? Would we still continue to see planet nine a day or a week or a year after it blows up? ...
ok they said it would take 3 years for the sun's light to reach planet 9....thanks for your post i didnt know thatthumbs up
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Jan 22, 2016 11:36 AM CST Planet 9
tomcatwarne
tomcatwarnetomcatwarneOcean City, Plumouth, Devon, England UK289 Threads 7 Polls 17,106 Posts
pedro27: they probaly discovered it but it hasnt been seen...sky news reports

But it's obviously there because of the little wobble on Uranus caused by electo-magnetic variations on it's poles.
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Jan 22, 2016 11:40 AM CST Planet 9
tomcatwarne: But it's obviously there because of the little wobble on Uranus caused by electo-magnetic variations on it's poles.


thats what they reported, it was sent into a further orbit, most likely a colusion with another planet
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Jan 22, 2016 12:36 PM CST Planet 9
galrads
galradsgalradsDublin, Ohio USA2,264 Threads 279 Polls 36,283 Posts
chatonlyman2: The answer is yes you can observe a light source that is no longer there at the speed of light.


Thanks. That makes me wonder now, just when do photons stop traveling, if ever, if other reactive energy doesn't absorb it; and regardless whether the light source exists or not. confused
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