It’s no longer a “Maybe” but a “Something”, a something, amateur astronomers with a good camera phone can see when looking up into a clear sky. That’s right, with a half decent camera, simply point at the sun, take a few pictures then open them with “Photoshop”, then key in ‘Alt & I’ in unison which results in the “negative” of the something. Call it whatever you want, 9th Planet, Wormwood, Nibiru, Planet X, or simply deny it, it really makes no difference, nonetheless it’s coming . . .
A catastrophe ominously looms on the horizon. Planet X, a huge planetary body, or star, is headed this way. Often termed as a great “Red Star,” its path is on a near-collision course with planet Earth.
If you haven't heard of the mysterious and deadly Planet X — you will, and sooner than you might think. A few doomsayers are calculating the planet's elliptical orbit will bring it nearest to the earth in October of 2018, while a majority predicts a distant 2078. Still, others insist it will be thousands or even millions of years before the 9th planet orbits near Earth again.
A significant number of professional astronomers at the world's top observatories share the view that there is a “9th planet” out-there someplace. More troubling, reports conclude that the gravitational pull of this planet X or Planet Nibiru as the ancient Sumerians called it, is already disturbing the heavens and causing what the astronomers call the “perturbation” effect which includes triggering adverse weather and both volcanic & seismic activity—and yep, if you’re an anti-global warming advocate, you just might love this consequence of Planet X’s path!
In simplistic terms, Planet X consists of a relatively small solar system (compared to our commonly recognized solar system) all its own . . . that’s within the confines of our universe and its entirety is in an elliptical orbit of Earth’s sun; much like the image depicted in the drawing on the left. Within its orbit are several small “planets” — one or more of which may be populated with highly advanced beings that have visited earth in times past when their “system” came in close proximity to Earth. Unfortunately, the system of planet X also contains multitudes of huge asteroids, several of which are very likely to be captured by earth’s magnetic pull during the upcoming “fly by”, that have the potential of becoming massive missiles of destruction. Most recent estimates place a complete orbit around the sun as low as 3,500 years to as much as 14,000 years.
Some astronomers have come to believe the Egyptians knew this star as Dogon or the “Dog Star” and worshiped it under the guise of Anubis, the jackal-headed god. A similar notion may explain the passages in Genesis 6, of the Holy Bible, that describes an early time when “star gods” mated with the daughters of men, producing offspring the Bible called Nephilim or “giants”. And lest we forget, the ancient Sumerians believed the Anunnaki; a race of beings they described as originating on Nibiru (planet X), created mankind by using Genetic Engineering thousands of years ago. The Sumerian’s, you may recall is believed to be the first known culture of mankind which flourished around 6,000 BC.
This claim may be the strongest yet for the centuries-old search for a “Planet X”, beyond Neptune. The quest has been plagued by fanciful claims and outright quackery. But this recent evidence comes from a pair of respected planetary scientists, Konstantin Batygin and Mike Brown of the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) in Pasadena, California.
Absolute fiction! Right? Well, maybe . . .
Okay, a majority of scientists and astronomers have historically believed Planet X to be only a hypothetical 9th planet in our solar system, specifically a planet outside the orbit of Neptune. Once thought to be responsible for apparent inconsistencies, such as movement away from its predicted path, in the orbit of Neptune, the term now refers to any theoretical planet beyond the orbit of Neptune.
The discovery of Pluto in 1930 seemed to validate the “hypothesis of inconsistencies” as Pluto was officially named the 9th planet. But in 1978, Pluto was conclusively determined to be too small for its gravity to affect the giant planet, resulting in the search for a “10th” planet. The search was essentially dropped in the early 1990s, when a study of measurements completed by the Voyager 2 spacecraft found that the irregularities observed were most likely due to a slight over-estimation of Neptune’s actual size. In 1992 and thereafter, the discovery of several small icy objects with similar or even “wider” orbits than Pluto led to a debate over whether Pluto qualified for planet status, or whether Pluto and its neighbors should be given their own separate classification. Finally, in 2006 the International Astronomical Union reclassified Pluto as a “dwarf planet”; so technically, Neptune (the 8th planet) is the farthest known “planet” in our Solar System.
The astronomical community generally believes that Planet X, as originally imagined, does not actually exist, but the concept of Planet X has been revived by a number of astronomers to explain other anomalies observed in our Solar System.
In Pop Culture, and even among some astronomers, Planet X has become an adoptive term for any “undiscovered” planet in the outer Solar System. Now we have respected planetary scientists like Batygin and Brown who have given unprecedented credibility to the notion of a Planet X—chances are we’d be better-served as a civilization if the passage of time proves them wrong!
Sources:
http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/hercolobus/esp_hercolobus_42.htm
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