We should see its approach within the next year, according to the researchers, Konstantin Batygin and Mike Brown.
Parker Williams
So...?
Evan Cox
As it passes, our magnetic field will shift with its passage. The planet will literally stop and align with the polarity of the passing planet. Total cataclysm.
Isaac Smith
End of the world? what are you on? Humans would barely notice beyond our electronics (gps, satellites) not functioning properly. Maybe the whales and dolphins and other species that rely on geomagnetic forces would freak out but that's about it.
Julian Rogers
you'll be one of the first to die
Dominic Russell
God wouldn't specifically make a man president, with the intention of him rebuilding a nation, just to blow up the world during that process. Fuck off.
Lincoln Nguyen
Yeah, Planet X can be real.
>But will be close of the earth? Unlikely
Caleb Davis
It's responsible for the tilt that all planets of the solar system have. Its magnetic field is insanely powerful.
It's a ice giant with the mass of up to 4 Jupiters. Any approach near its perihelion will cause total chaos.
Daniel Taylor
Where is scientif proof to that?
Sebastian Walker
In the links I provided already.
Ian Jenkins
> Its magnetic field is insanely powerful. >It's a ice giant with the mass of up to 4 Jupiters
Michael Smith
>I can't tell the difference between gravity and magnetic fields
Jace Ross
>gravity controls every aspect of everything
Hate to break it to you, but electromagnetism plays a part in our solar system as well, user.
Solar wind is charged particles.
Carson Lewis
God - maybe not (though I wouldn't be so sure about it). But Kek...
Ryder Torres
It states there is supposely a planet But its no proof
What do you think will happen with earth when this planet pass on his way around the sun?
Andrew King
You can attempt to read the thread, you know.
David Ramirez
The magnetic field protects us from the more harmful emission that our sun produces. It doesn't affect the Earth's rotation or orbit.
It is not strong enough to do so.
Daniel Clark
>if the magnetic field suddenly disappeared! There is geologic evidence that suggests the magnetic field has weakened and reversed several times. Everything is fine.
>if the Earth suddenly blew up, we would all die! this is you
Nicholas Baker
>tiny piece of shit 4 times the distance of Pluto nobody cares
Carter Wilson
>There is geologic evidence that suggests the magnetic field has weakened and reversed several times.
Yes, there is. And it keeps its timing fairly tight. Almost like how orbital patterns do.
Joseph Smith
Those papers specifically say "If it's out near its aphelion, it will take some of the largest telescopes to observe. However, if its closer to its perihelion, it may not take very long to spot it, and could already have been photographed."
Do none of you read?
Ryder Sanchez
>cataclysm
Are you really sure this planet exist and is causing the end of the world?
Henry Lewis
Oldest tools ever found are made of stone and are 2.8 million years old, planetnine orbit is about 15,000 years, We've already seen plane nine come by 186 times. stfu you idiots
Caleb Murphy
>Are you really sure this planet exist and is causing the end of the world?
Of course not. The only direct evidence of orbital patterns in a model.
There are conspiracy theorists on youtube who claim to see it, sure. I can't take that as proof positive. There's also the global myths coinciding around the same time, speaking of similar circumstance, but that's not hitting enough sigma for me to consider.
I believe it's a concern, and warrants more study. I believe, if it's real, we can't do anything about it, so no need to be worried.
Jason Sanders
I saw in the podesta email something about that, what catched my interest
Zachary Cook
>Super Moon that shit occurs pretty often
John Barnes
>there might be another planet maybe >GIGANTIC ICE PLANET 4 TIMES THE SIZE OF JUPITER(WHICH IS PHYSICALLY IMPOSSIBLE BUT IDGAF) THAT HAS A HUGE MAGNETIC CORE SOMEHOW CONFIRMED
Jackson Phillips
Why should this planet be of concern?
Aaron Clark
Yeah, that email written by schizophrenic dude.
It's just spam.
Christian Davis
It probably orbited many times by now so why should it be a concern
Carson White
Inertia.
Of water, specifically.
Nicholas Allen
>implying that a strong gravitational pull would be a bad idea >implying that all libecucks who never lifted getting crushed would be a bad thing
Looking forward to the world being a hyperbolic time chamber, desu
Angel Fisher
>Want to sleep >This thread
Ethan Wood
Can you go into details please?
Carter Reyes
so our water will get out and we end up like mars?
The oceanic bulges will be upset, causing massive tidal flooding of all coasts. Incredible earthquakes, total devastation.
Kevin Cruz
But user, why would god care about our desires?
Leo Butler
so 2012 but 5yrs late edition
Carson Sanchez
They suppose there exist a planet The chance is 90% It is about 3-4 times bigger and 10 times more heavy than earth
When should this cataclysm happen, in so far that is possible to determine They didnt spot it yet and dont know the position of it
Joseph Wood
even if it would exist, it would've orbited the sun many times by now and I don't think that the earth got fucked so many times.
Carter Foster
Correct, and worrying is futile right now. It will be a glorious apocalypse if it does happen though.
Connor Nelson
Your post is accurate.
>When should this cataclysm happen, in so far that is possible to determine We don't know. I don't think anyone knows for sure. Maybe the US government? Shouldn't be too hard to plot an orbital trajectory.
>Earth has an iron-nickel core, which produces our magnetic field. Stopped reading there. The magnetic field of the Earth is produced via a dynamo action in the mantle and inner mantle.
This is a single example, against a backdrop of global history, geological sediment deposit study, and evidence of pole shift occurrence.
Carter Martinez
>Shouldn't be too hard to plot an orbital trajectory. But it is. Objects that far out move very slowly. It took a while just to figure out Pluto's orbit.
Christian Wood
Jupiter is much bigger and has more mass then this planet Also it is closer
When Jupiter doesnt end the world, why should this one?
Joshua Ward
>When Jupiter doesnt end the world, why should this one?
Will Jupiter decide to get up and make a pass into the inner solar system in the next few years?
Nathaniel Gonzalez
>Orbital period: 10,000 to 20,000 years >Late Bronze Age collapse: approx. 5,000 years ago
Matthew Richardson
>We don't know. I don't think anyone knows for sure.
Colton Wilson
and you said somewhere next year, others say maybe in the next 20years. if the orbit is like "10,000-20,000", then we should've already seen it pass into our solar system don't you think?
Josiah Rodriguez
>in the next few years? Impossible, it would be well visible by now, even to the naked eye.
Nicholas Anderson
Where the hell say this planet will pass into the inner solar system...?
Kayden Bennett
"See an approach." I didn't say IT'S ON TOP OF US NOW, did I?
>We should see its approach within the next year, according to the researchers, Konstantin Batygin and Mike Brown.
Luis Myers
>Mass of 4J
Sounds like bullshit already. Mass can be inferred via gravitational interactions with surrounding objects fairly easily, so if there was something with the mass of 4 Jupiters out there, we would know about it by now.
>Its magnetic field is insanely powerful.
The magnetic fields of planets are very big, but not particularly strong. Jupiter's magnetic field is by far the strongest planetary field in the solar system at around 4.3 gauss (which is 20,000 times the strength of Earth's, and roughly 3 times the strength of an average neodymium magnet).
For a planet to have any real magnetic sphere, it needs a core of convecting conductive material (molten iron and nickel in Earth, metallic hydrogen in the gas giants). Since you say it isn't a gas giant, it can't have a core of metallic hydrogen, and given that Earth is fairly unique in being a rocky planet with a significant magnetic field resulting from a molten, convecting interior, it's highly unlikely.
Jack Powell
>We should see its approach within the next year, according to the researchers, Konstantin Batygin and Mike Brown.
And...?
Elijah Edwards
And nothing.
It's approaching, towards its perihelion, or it's heading back out towards its aphelion. We will either see its approach within the next year, or we won't.
What are you missing here? Do you understand what approach means? Things take time to travel in space.
Tyler Bailey
>We have evidence that civilization has been destroyed many times by something similar to the effects of what this planet would do.
Civilization got shaken, but not destroyed
I red a book about the sea people (Palestine), which stated, that a lot of factors, including vulcanos earthquakes... ended the bronze age By the way Mose exodus falls in this timeline, too?
>Will Jupiter decide to get up and make a pass into the inner solar system in the next few years?
You think trajectory could cause problems?
Mason Rodriguez
respond to my post faggot or any of them for that matter
Liam Jones
Yeah, it will approaching to us, but it will do nothing to us anyways. at least, almost nothing.
James Cooper
If you read the papers I linked, you would see they're already leasing out time at observatories to look for its pathway in their projected orbital pattern.
I can't really hand hold you and everyone else in the thread at the same time. Do a bit of your own research.
Dylan Adams
Biofag here.
With an elliptical orbit such as this, then you're saying it's orbit is every 10,000-20,000 years. As this would wipe out our magnetic shield everytime and kill every mammal, reptile, plant, plankton, and piece of soil bacteria on the planets surface by soaking it in cosmic radiation then you are basically aligning yourself with creationists theories of Humanity being roughly 8000 years old or some shit.
Good job you /x/ wanker/
Jeremiah Garcia
[Citation needed]
Jose Turner
Fantastic, that doesn't mean it's coming within a few years like you claimed.