There are other planets on the edge of our solar system

11 19. 04. 2023
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(2014) American astronomers have discovered the farthest object of our solar system so far. (More on Article: There is another planet on the edge of our solar system) The 2012 VP113 Dwarf Planet will never approach the Sun at less than 12 billion miles. Based on this discovery, we can assume that there is another big planet at the far edge of our system that by its gravity deflects objects like 2012 VP113 from their orbits and casts them into the so-called Oort cloud.

The authors of Chadwick Trujillo from Gemini Observatory in Hawaii and Scott Sheppard of the Carnegie Science Institute in Washington additionally calculated that there may be about 900 of other bodies with a diameter greater than 1000 kilometers in the area of ​​Oort's cloud.

"Some of these objects could even compete with Mars or Earth with their size," said Sheppard. "The search for these distant objects should continue because it tells us a lot about how our solar system was created," the scientist explained.

But there are mysterious hypotheses to which they are Nibiru a hidden planet that alternates around two stars, our Sun, and another body that is cold and out of the solar system. This idea was popularized by Azerbaijan writer Zecharia Sitchin, Nibiru, big like Saturn, enters the system once in 3600 years and comes from the giant creatures (Sumerian Anunnaki, biblical Nephilim) who have manipulated human DNA in the past.

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A revolutionary discovery on the horizon? There may be other Earth-sized planets in the solar system ...

Even at least two large planets like our Earth or even larger are hiding on the edge of the solar system behind Pluto's orbit, a team of Spanish scientists said, led by Professor Carlos de la Fuente Marcos of the University of Madrid. Astronomers say that when exploring the motion of the bodies behind the Neptune's path, irregularities can only be explained by the gravitational effects of large and unknown objects.

Until yet undiscovered worlds, according to Professor Marcosa, they are far beyond the orbit of Pluto - a dwarf planet that has been deleted from the planets because it is not gravitationally dominant in its area. It belongs among the so-called transneptunical bodies. The largest of these is Eris, which is even larger than Pluto itself, including Sedna, Makemake, Haumea or Quaoar. Spanish astronomers have studied the movements of these bodies, and some of them are out of computations and the Sun is orbiting on tracks whose eccentric shape can only be explained by the gravitational attraction of other objects.

"Their exact number is uncertain due to the limited amount of data, but calculations indicate that there are at least two planets at the solar system's boundaries, but maybe even more," Marcos said. "Our results can be a real revolution in astronomy," he added to a study published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Letters.

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