DG, you, and other members might remember it, or maybe not, but I have been presenting evidence that seems to point out that it is very possible that
such a dark star exists, it is indeed affecting not only Earth but every planet in the Solar System, it is also affecting the Sun, as well as comets
and satellites.
I have given in the past an interview that Art Bell made with Father Malachi Martin. The good Father, who passed away sometime ago by falling off
stairs and having a heart attack, stated in 1997 that within about 10 years there was something that was approaching, and which the high level Vatican
people knew would affect all of us on Earth.
Although of course 2007 has passed, however there have been more and more unexplained phenomenon that seems to point to this dark star, or something
similar approaching the Solar System.
Here is the interview again.
www.cyberspaceorbit.com...
Here is the latest thread I made which started out as a discussion for ultra cool dwarf travelling at incredible speeds, and then as I kept searching
found that there are more anomalies which seem to point to the fact that something massive is having physical effects on every planet in the Solar
system, as well as comets, and satellites.
www.abovetopsecret.com...
Here are some of the past threads I made about the pioneer anomalies, and other related phenomenon.
www.abovetopsecret.com...
Here is a thread about all the planets and Moons with an atmosphere in the Solar System which have also been experiencing Climate Change just like
Earth.
www.abovetopsecret.com...
Some members have claimed that since the 1940s no real scientists have proposed that there could be a dark companion star to our Sun, but the contrary
is the truth.
Two ideas for how to perturb the Oort Cloud have been proposed:
A dark sister sun called Nemesis: Our sun formed as a binary, with a secondary star that never began to shine (too small for fusion). Interaction of
the orbit of the two stars could regularly cause gravitational perturbation of the Oort Cloud. Systematic search for Nemesis has not yet revealed such
a dark star.
Galactic Plane Oscillation: Our solar system is not static within the galaxy, but oscillates up and down through the main symmetry plane of the Galaxy
with about a 60 million year periodicity. Each passage through the plane could lead to the surrounding Oort cloud being perturbed by increased
interstellar mass in the galactic plane. This would release a hail of comets, some of which would strike the Earth. The timing is not quite perfect,
but it is on the right scale. We are now pretty much in the middle of a cycle, so would not expect another mass extinction for millions of years.
ic.ucsc.edu...
A mystery revolves around the sun
Researchers suggest that huge unseen object orbits on fringe of solar system.
Oct. 7, 1999 Two teams of researchers have proposed the existence of an unseen planet or a failed star circling the sun at a distance of more than 2
trillion miles, far beyond the orbits of the nine known planets. The theory, which seeks to explain patterns in comets' paths, has been put forward
in research accepted for publication in two separate journals.
.....................
MORE QUESTIONS
How could such a massive object exist so far from the sun? The researchers say a planet or dark star could have coalesced during the formation of the
solar system billions of years ago, but more probably would be a passing celestial body that was captured by the sun�s subtle gravitational pull.
Another question: Why hasn't such an object been seen? Murray says that even a Jupiter-scale planet could not be observed at the immense distances
involved. Matese and his colleagues say that their hypothetical brown dwarf wouldn't have been detected even by the Infrared Astronomical Satellite,
which surveyed the heavens in 1983 but that the yet-to-be-launched Space Infrared Telescope Facility just might be able to pick it up.
www.msnbc.msn.com...
I also wonder what happened to this star, which IMO is not the dark companion of the Sun.
Runaway star voted off the island
Larry O'Hanlon
Discovery News
Astronomers have stumbled onto a runaway star inbound to our galaxy that might have been kicked out of our nearest galactic neighbour by a
supermassive black hole.
The star, HE 0437-5439, was found on a star survey and initially led its discoverers to suspect their instruments were out of whack.
"We first thought our wavelength calibration was off," says astronomer Dr Ralf Napiwotzki of the University of Hertfordshire's Centre for
Astrophysics Research in the UK.
The light from the star was the wrong colour, or wavelength, for where the star was located.
And it showed spectral signs that it was travelling inbound to the Milky Way at an unusually high speed, at 2.6 million kilometres per hour.
www.abc.net.au...
I made a really long thread years ago, as Muaddib, in which i compiled all the information that seemed to tell us such a star, or dark planet does
exist, but i haven't been able to find it yet.
If any old members remember i would appreciate it if they can post the link.
[edit on 12-7-2009 by ElectricUniverse]