Planet X Temperature
In Article <39050956.0205042128.30bb84f7@posting.google.com> Gurdpath wrote:
> Nancy, you cite approvingly a 1983 Washington
> Post article as evidence for the existence of Planet X,
> but I'm curious how a race of hominids could survive
> on a planetary body that is 459 degrees F below zero.
They dont know what it IS but theyre SURE its not inbound (scary
thought, otherwise) and because the thought of something close is so
scary, they put it WAY out if big, and dropped the temp to align with
the presumption on brown dwarfs of the day. From existing ZetaTalk:
Planet X does exist, and it is the 12th Planet, one
and the same. When first sighted via infrared
readings and reported by the IRAS team in 1983,
the IRAS findings were taken in many ways by
the human scientists reading the reports, and thus
they cast many interpretations on just what
[Planet X]'s infrared reading might imply.
Infrared heat can be taken to mean many things,
depending on distance, size, and composition of
the object being sensed. A very hot object far
away can be comparable to a barely warm object
near at hand, or a very large object far away can
be considered to be a smaller object close at
hand, and as the compression caused by the mass
of an object is considered to produce infrared rays,
then a very heavy but cold object could be
considered comparable to a lighter but warmer
object. The scientists reading the IRAS findings
took the 12th Planet, a.k.a. Planet X, to be larger,
colder, and farther away, as the mind does not
want to comprehend the alternatives. When first
sighted in 1983, it was on the right hand side of
Orion, as viewed from your northern hemisphere.
It will first move left and up toward the elliptical
plane as it nears the Earth's Solar System for its
passage, as though to assume a place with the
other planets in the Solar System, at this point
being slightly to the left of Orion. In 1998 it will
veer right, moving toward Taurus and Aries,
assuming a retrograde orbit, and will come up
through the plane as viewed from above the
elliptical plane, in its first passage. ...
The human mind does not wish to entertain the
awful, so most in this group were in denial,
though going along with the search as an
interesting scientific exercise, not unlike most
of the activity NASA et al undertake daily.
The discovery of solid proof so stunned most
of those involved in the search that their
guard was dropped, and thus the reports such
as the 1983 Washington Post front page article.
Interest in Planet X was roaring along going
into the 1983 IRAS search. Had Planet X
not been found, interest might still be roaring
along, in the media, that is. When the blanket
of suppression was dropped on the media and
major observatories, who know just where
Planet X is at all times these days, it took
some time for an explanation for the silence
to be concocted. Thus one finds the strange
silence, that lasted almost a decade, following
the Planet X discovery in 1983. Since JPL
and NASA are firmly in hand, doing the
bidding of the establishment on so many
information issues, they became the
designated arm of the explanation. The
mystery of why the outer planets appeared
perturbed to astronomers for the last 160
years was explained away by adjustments
in the size and composition of these outer
planets discovered by probes. The public
gets the conclusion, but not the details, or
they get the details in such a manner that
an independent conclusion can't be arrived
at. All very safe.
ZetaTalk, Planet X
(http://www.zetatalk.com/science/s58.htm)