|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
What if (on Sun Wobble)
On Feb 14, 5:35*am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote:
BG *Good question *"What causes Sirius to wobble?. I would go with a big gas planet??? * * * * *I do not know how far Sirius is from us? *I do know Sirius is about the brightest star in Summer in the southern hemisphere * TreBert I too believe it's either a massive gas giant or simply a small brown dwarf that's giving off mostly IR. However, it could also be a highly compacted planet or even a small black hole that emerged from one of their LHCs. Whatever it is, it should be detected and researched for all it's worth. ~ BG |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
What if (on Sun Wobble)
On Feb 14, 5:35*am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote:
BG *Good question *"What causes Serius to wobble?. I would go with a big gas planet??? * * * * *I do not know how far Serius is from us? *I do know Serius is about the brightest star in Summer in the southern hemisphere * TreBert Sirius is 8.6 light years from Earth and is the brightest star in the sky, period. Double-A |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
What if (on Sun Wobble)
On Feb 14, 1:44*pm, Double-A wrote:
On Feb 14, 5:35*am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote: BG *Good question *"What causes Serius to wobble?. I would go with a big gas planet??? * * * * *I do not know how far Serius is from us? *I do know Serius is about the brightest star in Summer in the southern hemisphere * TreBert Sirius is 8.6 light years from Earth and is the brightest star in the sky, period. Double-A That's not even to mention the Sirius UV spectrum (much of which doesn't get through our thin atmosphere), although hydrogen balloon assisted observations should be impressive. Unfortunately, we'll also need to narrow bandpass and focus on the IR spectrum if trying to detect Sirius C. ~ BG |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
What if (on Sun Wobble) + Uranius
What if Uranus did not wobble? Or was not this the reason astronomers
knew that Uranus was being pulled by an invisible object? A planet in our solar system used to find a planet near it sounds a little bizarre,but best to keep in mind over 150 years ago telescopes were not very powerful,and Neptune is about 40 times further from the Sun than Earth some 2825 million miles. TreBert |
#15
|
|||
|
|||
What if (on Sun Wobble) + Uranius
On Feb 21, 9:05*am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote:
What if Uranus did not wobble? *Or was not this the reason astronomers knew that Uranus was being pulled by an invisible object? *A planet in our solar system used to find a planet near it sounds a little bizarre,but best to keep in mind over 150 years ago telescopes were not very powerful,and Neptune is about 40 times further from the Sun than Earth some 2825 million miles. *TreBert An electron or neutron packed black hole doesn't have to be very big. Hopefully the LHC will create a few prototype terrestrial black holes, so that Earth gets to wobble. ~ BG |
#16
|
|||
|
|||
What if (on Sun Wobble) + Uranius
On Feb 21, 9:05*am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote:
What if Uranus did not wobble? *Or was not this the reason astronomers knew that Uranus was being pulled by an invisible object? *A planet in our solar system used to find a planet near it sounds a little bizarre,but best to keep in mind over 150 years ago telescopes were not very powerful,and Neptune is about 40 times further from the Sun than Earth some 2825 million miles. *TreBert Sirius A/B still have a significant wobble, of something .06 solar mass. Wonder what's causing it. An electron or neutron packed black hole doesn't have to be very big in order to impose its gravity. Hopefully the LHC will create a few prototype terrestrial black holes, so that Earth gets an extra wobble. ~ BG |
#17
|
|||
|
|||
What if (on Sun Wobble) + Uranius
"G=EMC^2 Glazier" wrote...
in message ... What if Uranus did not wobble? Or was not this the reason astronomers knew that Uranus was being pulled by an invisible object? A planet in our solar system used to find a planet near it sounds a little bizarre,but best to keep in mind over 150 years ago telescopes were not very powerful,and Neptune is about 40 times further from the Sun than Earth some 2825 million miles. TreBert Bert, if planet Uranus did not wobble, than planet Neptune would not have been found by astronomers (teams led by Urbain Le Verrier and John Couch Adams) who mapped out Neptune's probable position by the accurate measurements of Uranus' perterbation. The planet Neptune was discovered within about 1 degree of its predicted position. The even *more* astounding show was the discovery of Pluto. After finding Neptune, astronomers erroneously thought that there were still wobbles in Uranus that must mean yet another gas giant out beyond Neptune. After searching for many years, the astronomer Percival Lowell died without finding "Planet X". Then his student, Clyde Tombaugh, found what was thought to be the gas giant in almost precisely the predicted spot! Talk about your astounding mysteries of astronomy, especially when one considers that Pluto is sooo much smaller than a gas giant! happy days and... starry starry nights! -- Indelibly yours, Paine Ellsworth P.S.: "What is drama but life with the dull bits cut out." Alfred Hitchcock P.P.S.: http://Astronomy.painellsworth.net http://PoisonFalls.painellsworth.net http://TheInternetStory.painellsworth.net |
#18
|
|||
|
|||
What if (on Sun Wobble) + Uranius
Painius You are a knowledgable giant. Seems astronomers are using
"WOBBLE" more and more to find invisible objects. Wobble is the wave of the future TreBert |
#19
|
|||
|
|||
What if (on Sun Wobble) + Uranius
On Feb 21, 2:42*pm, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote:
Painius You are a knowledgable giant. Seems astronomers are using "WOBBLE" more and more to find invisible objects. Wobble is the wave of the future * TreBert But only as long as such wobble doesn't involve the Sirius star/solar system that we're kinda trekking ourselves towards at 7.6 km/s. Stellar dimming is yet another objective tool of science that can be peer replicated, but once again the Sirius star/solar system is apparently too close, too bright and otherwise can't be looked at without special permission from some Zionist approved God. However, a Sirius C that's in a polar orbit would somewhat exclude the usual detection via dimming per orbit, unless that polar orbit were sufficiently aligned with us. All is however lost if Sirius C turns out being a highly compacted kind of extremely high density planet (say one of nearly pure thorium and uranium), or that of a small black hole about the size of a large beach ball. ~ BG |
#20
|
|||
|
|||
What if (on Sun Wobble) + Uranius
On Feb 21, 2:01*pm, "Painius" wrote:
"G=EMC^2 Glazier" wrote... in ... What if Uranus did not wobble? *Or was not this the reason astronomers knew that Uranus was being pulled by an invisible object? *A planet in our solar system used to find a planet near it sounds a little bizarre,but best to keep in mind over 150 years ago telescopes were not very powerful,and Neptune is about 40 times further from the Sun than Earth some 2825 million miles. *TreBert Bert, if planet Uranus did not wobble, than planet Neptune would not have been found by astronomers (teams led by Urbain Le Verrier and John Couch Adams) who mapped out Neptune's probable position by the accurate measurements of Uranus' perterbation. *The planet Neptune was discovered within about 1 degree of its predicted position. The even *more* astounding show was the discovery of Pluto. *After finding Neptune, astronomers erroneously thought that there were still wobbles in Uranus that must mean yet another gas giant out beyond Neptune. *After searching for many years, the astronomer Percival Lowell died without finding "Planet X". *Then his student, Clyde Tombaugh, found what was thought to be the gas giant in almost precisely the predicted spot! *Talk about your astounding mysteries of astronomy, especially when one considers that Pluto is sooo much smaller than a gas giant! What's the current 105~110 thousand year wobble of our solar system related to? ~ BG |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
What if(Wobble Theory Again) | G=EMC^2 Glazier[_1_] | Misc | 27 | January 1st 09 12:40 PM |
Wobble ?????? | G=EMC^2 Glazier[_1_] | Misc | 8 | June 24th 08 09:16 PM |
Wobble and weather | Procellarum | Amateur Astronomy | 1 | June 27th 06 06:52 PM |
The Chandler Wobble | Weatherlawyer | UK Astronomy | 5 | April 3rd 06 03:25 PM |
do galaxies wobble? | Ted Sung | Research | 2 | July 11th 04 07:56 PM |