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Old 21-01-2016, 08:53 AM
johnnyt123 (John)
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New 9th planet in our solar system!!!

Hi guys and gals

Have a read of this.
It is very exciting!!
A new ninth Neptune sized planet has been found or believed to exist beyond the orbit of Pluto.

http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2016/...n-solar-system

Regards.

John.
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Old 21-01-2016, 09:26 AM
04Stefan07 (Stefan)
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Exciting news!

Looking forward to see what will unfold in the next while.
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Old 21-01-2016, 11:14 AM
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Announcing a 'new planet' discovery has been going on for a bloody long time, including plenty of examples of mathematically calculated planets that turned out not to exist.
Once we've got an image (read 'tiny dot') of it I'll believe it.
That said, I hope these guys are right, and well done to them if they are.
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Old 21-01-2016, 11:31 AM
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Originally Posted by AussieTrooper View Post
Announcing a 'new planet' discovery has been going on for a bloody long time, including plenty of examples of mathematically calculated planets that turned out not to exist.
Once we've got an image (read 'tiny dot') of it I'll believe it.
That said, I hope these guys are right, and well done to them if they are.
that was my reaction first. the only thing that i would say is that Mike Brown did some fantastic work in discovering Eris. if it involved anyone else i would have dismissed this.
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Old 21-01-2016, 11:56 AM
el_draco (Rom)
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Hope Brown is the last person on earth to find it, IF it exists, or it lands on his egotistical noggin and kills him....
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Old 21-01-2016, 12:04 PM
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So, there is some truth about the myth of Nelirbu!
Yes, heard it on the ABC news this morning.
Seem, it is about the size of Neptune and takes 10000 years to orbit the Sun.
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Old 21-01-2016, 12:13 PM
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So, there is some truth about the myth of Nelirbu!
Yes, heard it on the ABC news this morning.
Seem, it is about the size of Neptune and takes 10000 years to orbit the Sun.
That is what you get from the organisation that canned star stuff
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Old 21-01-2016, 08:38 PM
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Great news but it will be so difficult to find:

Quote:
Only the planet's rough orbit is known, not the precise location of the planet on that elliptical path. -
See more at:
http://www.caltech.edu/news/caltech-....FQiZjPKU.dpuf
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Old 21-01-2016, 09:52 PM
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gaa_ian (Ian)
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This will be an amazing discovery when it is confirmed. Might be a job for the James Webb Tekescope once it is launched !
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Old 21-01-2016, 10:36 PM
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Originally Posted by gaa_ian View Post
This will be an amazing discovery when it is confirmed. Might be a job for the James Webb Tekescope once it is launched !

If they could give us the RA & DEC we could dial it in & check pictures weeks apart for any movement -

but they can't - they don't know the RA & DEC themselves.
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Old 21-01-2016, 10:38 PM
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If they could give us the RA & DEC we could dial it in & check pictures weeks apart for any movement -

but they can't - they don't know the RA & DEC themselves.
they have narrowed it down to about 1/4 of the sky. not sure what Magnitude it would be, i cant imagine it would be detectable for amateurs ...
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Old 21-01-2016, 10:48 PM
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they have narrowed it down to about 1/4 of the sky. not sure what Magnitude it would be, i cant imagine it would be detectable for amateurs ...
Amateurs can still do a long integration subframe & get down to small magnitudes.
The problem is that the huge area to be scanned would take forever to image.
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Old 21-01-2016, 10:56 PM
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agreed, but it will probably be closer to Mag 30 than 20, making it very difficult
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Old 21-01-2016, 11:03 PM
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Originally Posted by Somnium View Post
agreed, but it will probably be closer to Mag 30 than 20, making it very difficult
But Pluto is mag 15 & it's very small -

this new planet is say 10 times further away but much larger -
as large as Neptune.

I think an amateur may very well be able to get a little dot on their image.
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Old 21-01-2016, 11:14 PM
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distance reduces the magnitude by the third power ... makes a huge difference, increase in surface area goes by the square
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Old 21-01-2016, 11:39 PM
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back of the envelope calculations (based on pure speculation and absolutely no evidence) puts it at around mag 20 ... +/- 20
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  #17  
Old 22-01-2016, 12:32 AM
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back of the envelope calculations (based on pure speculation and absolutely no evidence) puts it at around mag 20 ... +/- 20
So what you're saying is that it lies somewhere between Vega and the dimmest galaxies in the universe
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Old 22-01-2016, 01:50 AM
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If I can dream... may be fools dreams...

1) Our planet has many and much chemical elements that should be produced by nova/supernova.
The binary system is more common than single star system.
Would it be the remains from nova or supernova of a companion star, as cold dwarf star ? Is it possible with only 4.5 billions of years (age of our sun) ? It seems to be few time to let proto-Earth catch those chemical elements.

2) Our Solar System did 22 tour around our galaxy. Many stars or bodies could be near us during this time. Could it be a captured body ? It seems to me a too long orbit for planet.
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Old 22-01-2016, 02:38 AM
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yeah, it's not a planet. it's a wormhole, the end of line 7 of the Milky Subway, d'oh.

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Old 22-01-2016, 06:06 AM
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yeah, it's not a planet. it's a wormhole, the end of line 7 of the Milky Subway, d'oh.
Wow, fantastic knowledge ! You deserve to win the Physics Nobel Award. Congratulations, mate !
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