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Is there a neutron star in our solar system ? ? ? ?



 
 
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  #1  
Old November 20th 04, 08:28 AM
Hans-Marc Olsen
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Default Is there a neutron star in our solar system ? ? ? ?

I heard one of the moons of Jupiter or Saturn is a neutron star.

Is that true or just a myth?
  #3  
Old November 20th 04, 12:17 PM
Tom Randy
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On Sat, 20 Nov 2004 00:28:09 -0800, Hans-Marc Olsen wrote:

I heard one of the moons of Jupiter or Saturn is a neutron star.

Is that true or just a myth?



Think about it. You'll know the answer.

Unbelievable....

  #5  
Old November 21st 04, 10:52 PM
OhBrother
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On Sat, 20 Nov 2004 06:06:07 -0600, Patrick Lee Humphrey wrote:

It's not even credible -- even the smallest neutron star would mass more than
our sun, and the observed motions of Jupiter and Saturn are precisely what
they're expected to be if they're planets orbiting the sun. The gravity
effects alone would have made it impossible to get Voyager or Cassini anywhere
near those planets.


Um, what if it's a special 'lighweight' pulsar, the rough equivalent of a
watermelon pulsar with the density of essentially a typical moon.

That might account for the fact it can't be detected. Remember, if these folks
'feel' it is right, then it must be, and absence of evidence doesn't mean
evidence of absence.

Remember what we learned with PlanetX. Maybe we can get Rudolph_X to
scrum up some posts from Rense on that topic.

O'

  #6  
Old November 22nd 04, 02:59 AM
Art Deco
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OhBrother wrote:

On Sat, 20 Nov 2004 06:06:07 -0600, Patrick Lee Humphrey wrote:

It's not even credible -- even the smallest neutron star would mass more
than
our sun, and the observed motions of Jupiter and Saturn are precisely what
they're expected to be if they're planets orbiting the sun. The gravity
effects alone would have made it impossible to get Voyager or Cassini
anywhere
near those planets.


Um, what if it's a special 'lighweight' pulsar, the rough equivalent of a
watermelon pulsar with the density of essentially a typical moon.

That might account for the fact it can't be detected. Remember, if these folks
'feel' it is right, then it must be, and absence of evidence doesn't mean
evidence of absence.

Remember what we learned with PlanetX. Maybe we can get Rudolph_X to
scrum up some posts from Rense on that topic.


And label more posters "mother insultors".

--
  #7  
Old November 22nd 04, 08:50 AM
Wally Anglesea
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"Hans-Marc Olsen" wrote in message
m...
I heard one of the moons of Jupiter or Saturn is a neutron star.

Is that true or just a myth?


you are an idiot.


 




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