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Old January 8th 04, 06:57 AM
Archimedes Plutonium
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Default Pluto a moon of Neptune that escaped Mesa in the background of Mars landing site coal found on Mars; CellWell1 and CellWell2 origins of the Solar System

Earlier today I wrote:

Is there a physicist out there who can answer in a nice way as to why
satellites would have a tendency to wander and escape a swallowing up
of their gas giant parents? My intuition would tell me that if you had
big balls and little marbles going around the big balls and if the big
balls come together in one place (swallowing up) that the marbles
should also be swallowed up and not escape the swallowing. Perhaps
there is some tendency that I am forgetting about. Perhaps the
behaviour of Pluto as it seems to be escaping from the errant
wandering of Neptune, lies the answer.


And coming to think about it more and more, I figure that the Solar
System, unlike electrons orbiting a nucleus, constantly lose energy
and gravitate towards the center of the SolarSystem which would be the
Sun. But since the decrease in orbits is uneven a twin star may emerge
from the coalescence of the gasgiants. But in this breaking down of
gasgiant orbits do the moons of the gasgiants luckily escape the
Swallowing? I can see where perhaps 1/2 of the satellites of the
gasgiants of Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune could escape the
Swallowment.
Because their orbit around their gas giant is on the farside when that
gasgiant is pulled each "periodic year" into this decreasing orbit of
the SolarSystem. And some periodic-years where say Jupiter, Saturn and
Uranus are aligned in their orbit where the pull on Neptune is so
large that Neptune violently breaks its old orbit and is pulled
further away from its moon of Pluto.

I do not know how many gasgiants existed in CellWell1 where the Sun
remains as the Swallowment and where Mercury, Venus Earth and Mars
were the lucky moons that escaped their gas giant parent.

Looking at CellWell2 of the gasgiants of Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus,
Neptune that by the time of their Swallowment they would be a tiny new
star, but a supercomputer could figure out where in our SolarSystem
this second star would be created. And would Europa be spared of
swallowment? Pluto would be spared for it already has the orbital
status of a planet itself when it was some billion years ago still a
moon of Neptune.

So in the above I feel there is the innate mechanics in all
SolarSystems for their wandering gasgiants to coalesce and form a new
star and that their satellites wander alone and becoming fullfledged
planets.

Keep in mind that Solarsystems keep growing in mass every day from the
cosmic rays shot from the Nucleus of the AtomTotality and so by the
day of Swallowment for Jupiter and the gasgiants of CellWell2, they
will be many times more massive than at present and result in a newly
shining small star. That is the reason why we see so many exoplanets
in alien solarsystems of having such huge massive exoplanets circling
their own Sun. Because those alien exoplanets are in last stages of
Swallowment.

But a supercomputer should be given the task of figuring out where our
gasgiants will meet and be Swallowed up to form a new star alongside
our Sun. And to compute as to how many of the gasgiant satellites will
survive the Swallowment. And to compute whether Pluto was indeed a
moon of Neptune some long past years ago.

Archimedes Plutonium
whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots
of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies