Planet 9 - Linda Moulton Howe interview with Caltech scientist Brown

Divide by Zero

The Living Force
In the coast to coast AM show from January 26, 2017, Linda Moulton Howe interviews Mike Brown of Caltech who speaks about Planet 9.


Audio File mp3 that I extracted from the show here (approx 20 minutes for this segment)

http://www.filedropper.com/ctocjan26-17-lindamoultonhowe-planet9
or
http://www.share-online.biz/dl/NWCIUWKOFML



Some interesting things, they go into the mysterious 5 degree tilt of the Sun not being the Sun tilted, but the planets are aligned at an angle. Possibly due to the twin sun idea? He said this planet acts like a lever, being heavy and far out would affect the orbits of our solar system.


This object is called an anomaly between the kuiper belt and oort cloud, sound familiar?
 
The search for Planet9 is going on and astronomers Mike Brown and Konstantin Batygin are leading the way with sky observations and theoretical calculations.

What I've got out of it:

Watching the orbits of the so called Sednoids (purple lines on the image below) or Sedna-like objects (there are seven of them in a stable orbit around the Sun) they noticed that they're all pointing on one side and that the shape they draw is very peculiar. They then theorized the existence of a ninth planet, 6-7 times the mass of Earth, that has the gravitational pull to drive the orbits of those Sednoids on that side of the system.

Stableorbits.jpg

This alleged 9th planet must have a stable orbit at 80 or 100 AU from the Sun according to the astronomers. Just consider that Pluto's mean distance from the Sun is at 39 AU.

Long time ago the Cs gave us a list of the Solar System planets, and far away form Pluto they said the next planet would be this NI = Montonanas, at the staggering distance of 570,000,000,000 miles or roughly 6132 AU (whoa!) from the Sun. And slightly smaller that Earth in diameter.

So... What if whatever is messing up with these Sednoids, that could be verily at 80 AU or so, may be something else instead, and not a "planet".

Here's the last interview with the two astronomers dating 1 year ago.
 
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