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Fixed stars, asteroids and other cosmic objects
Nibiru in Natal Chart??
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<blockquote data-quote="Matthew The Astrologer" data-source="post: 268010" data-attributes="member: 7794"><p>Astronomers... especially amateur ones, of which their are thousands... point their telescopes in every direction, not just the plane of the ecliptic. In fact. a lot of amateur astronomers don't bother with that direction because the asteroids that way have largely been spotted, and amateurs LOVE making new discoveries. A comet, on the other hand, can come in from any direction. Amateur astronomers all LOVE the idea of being the first one to spot an incoming comet. Ask one.</p><p></p><p>Also, an object the size of Jupiter (or Mars for that matter) within the orbit of Saturn (as it would have to be if it's on a 3600 year orbit and is almost at perihelion now) wouldn't even require a telescope to see by this point in its orbit. Never mind everything I said on my show (did you listen to the above link?) about how Kepler's Three <em>Laws</em> of orbital dynamics would make such a hugely stretched out elliptical orbit so very, very prone to gravitational interactions from other bodies that... even if it DID rampage through the Solar System 3600 hundred years ago, it would be pretty much impossible... even with supercomputers... to predict when it would return on its new orbit (or if it would at all) after a close encounter with Earth.</p><p></p><p>But of course, lots of people in the Southern Hemisphere like looking at the night sky, even without a telescope. They can't ALL be part of a vast conspiracy to hide the truth, can they?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Matthew The Astrologer, post: 268010, member: 7794"] Astronomers... especially amateur ones, of which their are thousands... point their telescopes in every direction, not just the plane of the ecliptic. In fact. a lot of amateur astronomers don't bother with that direction because the asteroids that way have largely been spotted, and amateurs LOVE making new discoveries. A comet, on the other hand, can come in from any direction. Amateur astronomers all LOVE the idea of being the first one to spot an incoming comet. Ask one. Also, an object the size of Jupiter (or Mars for that matter) within the orbit of Saturn (as it would have to be if it's on a 3600 year orbit and is almost at perihelion now) wouldn't even require a telescope to see by this point in its orbit. Never mind everything I said on my show (did you listen to the above link?) about how Kepler's Three [I]Laws[/I] of orbital dynamics would make such a hugely stretched out elliptical orbit so very, very prone to gravitational interactions from other bodies that... even if it DID rampage through the Solar System 3600 hundred years ago, it would be pretty much impossible... even with supercomputers... to predict when it would return on its new orbit (or if it would at all) after a close encounter with Earth. But of course, lots of people in the Southern Hemisphere like looking at the night sky, even without a telescope. They can't ALL be part of a vast conspiracy to hide the truth, can they? [/QUOTE]
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Nibiru in Natal Chart??
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