Planet-X
Resurfaces By
Joshua Hill Saturday, March 1, 2008 http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/2101 Scientists
at Kobe University, Japan, announced Thursday that they believe another planet
is orbiting within our solar system, up to two-thirds the size of the Earth. Yes
ladies and gentlemen, Planet-X is back!
I
remember as a child in primary school extolling to all who would hear me that
there were in fact 10 planets in our solar system, and not the regulation 9. It
is a wonderful thing to be 10 years old with more information than those around
you. In fact, to be perfectly honest, its a wonderful thing being any age
and having more information than anyone around you, but that is another piece.
That Planet-X
was later proven to be a myth, but I cant help but wonder has it reappeared,
or is this really just another until recently undiscovered planet. To
be published in the April issue of the US-Based Astronomical Journal, the study
by Tadashi Mukai, the lead researcher and Patryk Lykawka is, however apparently
based in nothing more than supposition. The
pair from Kobe University set up a theoretical model that focusing on the Kuiper
belt similar to the asteroid belt sitting between Mars and Jupiter, but
out past Neptune and far larger; 20 times as wide and 20200 times as massive.
The model was
designed to look at the area and how it would have evolved over the past four
billion years. In coming up with an explanation for the celestial bodies,
we thought it would be most natural to assume the existence of a yet unknown planet,
Mukai said. Based on our hypothesis, we calculated how debris moved over
the past four billion years. The result matched the actual movement of the celestial
bodies we can observe now. So,
as far as I can see, there isnt anything like the gravitational effects
that were played out on Neptune that led to astronomer Clyde Tombaugh locating
Pluto in 1930. This time around, it is as far as I can tell simple
statistics. The
possibility is high that a yet unknown, planet-class celestial body, measuring
30 percent to 70 percent of the Earths mass, exists in the outer edges of
the solar system, said a summary of the research released by Kobe University.
If research is conducted on a wide scale, the planet is likely to be discovered
in less than 10 years. So
for all of us that intend to have that piece of trivia knowledge over our mates
at a future pub visit, lets keep our fingers crossed they finally locate
Planet-X (and reinstate Pluto. It would be a bit anti-climactic to once again
find a ninth planet!).
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