Question:

Did you know there really is a planet x,...?

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http://www.dailygalaxy.com/my_weblog/2008/02/scientists-at-k.html#more

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  1. I think it is a bit early to be saying "there really is".  This is a particular scenario supported by educated speculation based on computer modelling.  Since the predicted planet would be bright enough to be seen by present telescopes, even though slow moving, the idea is at least capable of confirmation or refutation by observation over the next decade.


  2. If astronomers have found then it might exist but the researches are still going on..Lets see the result..It would be interesting to welcome a new planet in the solar system....

  3. no i didn't but i wouldn't be surprised because the Kepler belt have many objects like pluto and planet X that is why pluto is not  a planet any more

  4. yeah, and so was pluto, and eris and a bunch of other trans-neptunian objects.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Eight...

    they've all been dubbed planet x before they where actually discovered.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planet_X

    life PROBABLY doesn't exist that far away from the sun in the coldness of space.

    oh no, not you again.........

    still posting videos of astronauts trying to make scientific accomplishments and dying on reentry, then claiming its a ufo blowing up asteroids to protect earth?

    that was SICK. and so is your twisted mind.

    try using common sense in the future instead of following nonsensical rantings.

  5. Our galaxy, the milky way has 8 planets (formerly 9 when pluto is still considered as planet). Then During early 2005 planet Eris was discovered by Mike Brown, Chad Trujillo, and David Rabinowitz team. Eris is classified as a dwarf planet and trans-Neptunian object (TNO); the intersection of these categorizations makes it a "plutoid" together with pluto. As Eris is larger than Pluto, it was initially described as the "tenth planet" by NASA and in media reports of its discovery. In response to the uncertainty over its status, and because of ongoing debate over whether Pluto should be classified as a planet, the IAU delegated a group of astronomers to develop a sufficiently precise definition of the term planet to decide the issue. This was announced as the IAU's Definition of a Planet in the Solar System, adopted on 24 August 2006. At this time both Eris and Pluto were classified as dwarf planets, a category distinct from the new definition of planet. Brown has since stated his approval of the "dwarf planet" label.

    Planet X named known as Redux is not yet officially anounced as a planet.

    http://www.zimbio.com/The+Planet+Pluto/a...

  6. That's not what the article says.  No, I didn't.

  7. there is a big difference between a statistical model and an actual discovery.

    did you actually read the article?

  8. A computer simulation is NOT a real planet.

  9. wow,there probable mo life there

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