1980's which resulted in the
The human mind does not wish to entertain the awful, so most in this group were in denial, though going along with
the search as an interesting scientific exercise, not unlike most of the activity NASA et al undertake daily. The
discovery of solid proof so stunned most of those involved in the search that their guard was dropped, and thus the
reports such as the 1983 Washington Post front page article. Interest in Planet X was roaring along going into the 1983
IRAS search. Had Planet X not been found, interest might still be roaring along, in the media, that is. When the
blanket of suppression was dropped on the media and major observatories, who know
times these days, it took some time for an explanation for the silence to be concocted. Thus one finds the strange
silence, that lasted almost a decade, following the Planet X discovery in 1983. Since JPL and NASA are firmly in
hand, doing the bidding of the establishment on so many information issues, they became the designated arm of the
explanation. The mystery of why the outer planets appeared perturbed to astronomers for the last 160 years was
explained away by adjustments in the size and composition of these outer planets discovered by probes. The public
gets the conclusion, but not the details, or they get the details in such a manner that an independent conclusion can't be
arrived at. All very safe.
http://www.zetatalk2.com/science/s58.htm[2/5/2012 11:54:26 AM]
ZetaTalk: Planet X
http://www.zetatalk2.com/science/s58.htm[2/5/2012 11:54:26 AM]
ZetaTalk: Comet Orbit
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The 12th Planet's path is elliptical, making a long flat circle around its two gravitational masters, your Sun and a body
you cannot see. The Sun's alter ego in this matter is not an object on your sky maps, but for the purposes of calculating
the 12th Planet's orbit, you can assume it be have the same mass as the Sun, and to be at a distance that allows the
curve of the ellipse to smooth to an essentially straight line between the two orbital foci. The 12th Planet's travels are
not unlike a train on parallel tracks, where the train is on one side of the tracks going in one direction, and on the other
side coming back. It will surprise you to know that the second foci is
it space. To use multiples of the distance from your Sun to its farthest known orbiting planet, which you call Pluto, this
foci is from the Sun 18.724 times as far away.
The elliptical path of the 12th Planet does little direct damage to the planets in your Solar System, which are lined up
on a plane with each other. The 12th Planet comes in on an angle, such that it is only the Point of Passage where a direct collision could occur. This point, at the present time, is not in the orbital path of any of your Solar System
planets, although that was not the case in the distant past as your Asteroid Belt attests. For this pole shift, we estimate
that the Earth will be on the same side as the 12th Planet, at approximately an 18 degree angle from where the 12th
Planet comes closest to the Sun. Its return is on the other side of the Sun, but for the Earth, hapless in this matter, this
may be an advantage or disadvantage depending on where the Earth is in its own orbit at the time. On the 12th Planet's
return voyage, during this passage, the Earth will be protected by the Sun from a full impact, but mild earthquakes and
heavy tides will recur at that time.
Having passed by the Sun, the 12th Planet now slows. The rate of slowing is dependent on two factors, essentially - its
speed and the fact that both its gravitational masters are now behind it. As fast as the 12th Planet picked up speed
approaching your Sun, it slows even faster, the nearness of your Sun behind it no small factor in this. Nevertheless, for
a traveling planet the size of the 12th Planet, putting on the brakes and turning about is no small matter. It must first
come to a stop, which it does in approximately 2 years 3 months after passing your Sun. The 12th Planet's orbit takes it
well away from the Sun after passage, so that it moves out a distance equal to 1/4 of the distance between the Sun and
its other foci before it slows to a stop. After passing through the Solar System, the 12th Planet moves out on the
opposite side some 3.560 times the distance from your Sun to its farthest planet, Pluto, then stops. It then hovers, not
moving, essentially, for 3 years 6 months, and then slowly begins a return trip which telescopes or mirrors the voyage
out.
There are no stars in the sighting line that can be used as a guide, but one need not grope about in the heavens for
guide posts when the best are within your own Solar System. Neither the 12th Planet's orbital plane or any axis placed
upon it at intersection points have identifiable stars directly on the plane or such an axis. It would be a bit to this side
or a bit to that side, and there we are again with imprecision. Let us suggest that a more satisfying approach would be
to use stabilizing points within your Solar System. The path of your Moon is well known and its orbit forms a plane as