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Old August 16th 14, 05:15 PM posted to alt.astronomy
Kevin Barry
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Posts: 363
Default Returning to Oort

So Oort claims that there is a 'cloud' surrounding the Solar System (shrug).... What makes him believe that? There is no cloud surrounding the Solar System. What is Oort really trying to say? Oort, I think, follows on the heels of Schrodinger and Heisenberg. Oort is building up the context needed to prove the magnetic theory of relativity. Oort is comprehensible if there are cloud signatures around

**NEARBY STARS**

which don't include the Solar System. It is impossible to prove the magnetic theory of relativity if cloud signatures are not detectable from Earth on nearby stars. Ya can't really be sure of what business physics has applying itself to astronomy seems to be the object lesson from Oort. Oh, physics is on a bender to prove that there are planets orbiting nearby stars?... Well, I think I speak on the behalf of all of aerospace engineering when I say: We really don't care if all of your planet analysis turns out to be a pile of crap. It really seems impossible that physics puts their faith in that sort of thing. If there is an Oort cloud surrounding the Solar System, then that would imply that we don't know anything about planets in the Solar System. Whatever is being called a planet in our solar system is an optical illusion.

Much earlier some people on these groups were claiming that 'leverage' is the holy grail of physics... It is not altogether clear what they mean by that but it may seem to apply to Oort. There is no Oort Cloud around the Solar System because the planets in the Solar System are leverage against it... but not only are they leverage against it, they are leverage to determine cloud signatures around nearby stars. Clarification of nearby stars with their cloud signatures is leverage on the Milky Way center.