Re: Planet X/12th Planet Search in Early 1980's
Article: <6g2rbs$p88@sjx-ixn10.ix.netcom.com>
Subject: Re: Planet X/12th Planet Search in Early 1980's
Date: 3 Apr 1998 14:22:52 GMT
In article <6fuac3$dr4$1@news.ccit.arizona.edu> Jim Scotti writes:
> All these articles discuss the possibility of a new planet and
> maybe even some unconfirmed reports, but they are not
> scientific proof that there was a planet found or that there
> is a coverup.
All this explained away by adding a fraction of a percent in weight to
one of the outer planets? That's about as logical as claiming a
slowing rotation on weather!
Astronomy magazine, Dec '81, discussion on Planet X
:: However, tiny Pluto is 100 to 1,000 times too small to fully
:: account for Uranus' wobble, according to Thoman Van
:: Flandern of the USNO. A brief flurry of excitement,
:: followed Charles Kowal's 1977 discovery of the planetoid
:: Chiron, orbiting between Saturn and Uranus, until it was
:: determined that it was too minute to be planet 10.
Astronomy magazine, Oct '82, discussion on Planet X on page 62.
:: Both Uranus and Neptune follow irregular paths that
:: observers can explain only by assuming the presence
:: of an unknown body whose gravity tugs at the two planets.
:: Astronomers originally though Pluto might be the body
:: perturbing its neighbors, but the combined mass of Pluto
:: and its moon, Charon, is too small for such a role.
Newsweek magazine, June 28 '82, a short article on page 83.
:: A "dark companion" could produce the unseen force that
:: seems to tug at Uranus and Neptune, speeding them up at
:: one point in their orbits and holding them back as they pass.
:: ... Anderson thinks the best bet is a dark star orbiting at
:: least 50 billion miles beyond Pluto, which is 3.6 billion miles
:: from the sun. It is most likely either a brown dwarf - a
:: lightweight star that never attained the critical mass needed
:: to ignite - or else a neutron star, the remnants of a normal sun
:: that burned out and collapsed. Other scientists suggest that
:: the most likely cause of the orbital snags is a tenth planet
:: 4 to 7 billion miles beyond Neptune. A companion star
:: would tug the outer planets, not just Uranus and Neptune,
:: says Thomas Van Flavern of the U.S Naval Observatory.
Washington Post, 31-Dec-1983, a front page story,
Mystery Heavenly Body Discovered
:: A heavenly body possibly as large as the giant planet
:: Jupiter and possibly so close to Earth that it would be
:: part of this solar system has been found in the direction
:: of the constellation Orion by an orbiting telescope aboard
:: the U.S. infrared astronomical satellite.
US News World Report, Sept 10, 1984, article on page 74
:: Shrouded from the sun's light, mysteriously tugging at
:: the orbits of Uranus and Neptune, is an unseen force that
:: astronomers suspect may be Planet X - a 10th resident
:: of the Earth's celestial neighborhood. Last year, the
:: infrared astronomical satellite (IRAS), circling in a polar
:: orbit 560 miles from the Earth, detected heat from an
:: object about 50 billion miles away that is now the subject
:: of intense speculation.