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 Post subject: Getting WISE About Nemesis
PostPosted: Fri Mar 12, 2010 4:22 am 
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A dark object may be lurking near our solar system, occasionally kicking comets in our direction.

Nicknamed "Nemesis" or "The Death Star," this undetected object could be a red or brown dwarf star, or an even darker presence several times the mass of Jupiter.

Why do scientists think something could be hidden beyond the edge of our solar system? Originally, Nemesis was suggested as a way to explain a cycle of mass extinctions on Earth.

The paleontologists David Raup and Jack Sepkoski claim that, over the last 250 million years, life on Earth has faced extinction in a 26-million-year cycle. Astronomers proposed comet impacts as a possible cause for these catastrophes.

Our solar system is surrounded by a vast collection of icy bodies called the Oort Cloud. If our Sun were part of a binary system in which two gravitationally-bound stars orbit a common center of mass, this interaction could disturb the Oort Cloud on a periodic basis, sending comets whizzing towards us.

An asteroid impact is famously responsible for the extinction of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago, but large comet impacts may be equally deadly. A comet may have been the cause of the Tunguska event in Russia in 1908. That explosion had about a thousand times the power of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, and it flattened an estimated 80 million trees over an 830 square mile area.

While there's little doubt about the destructive power of cosmic impacts, there is no evidence that comets have periodically caused mass extinctions on our planet. The theory of periodic extinctions itself is still debated, with many insisting that more proof is needed. Even if the scientific consensus is that extinction events don't occur in a predictable cycle, there are now other reasons to suspect a dark companion to the Sun.

more info here..

http://www.sott.net/articles/show/20454 ... ut-Nemesis

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 Post subject: Re: Getting WISE About Nemesis
PostPosted: Fri Mar 12, 2010 4:33 am 
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NIBURU.....???!? WTF

Quote:
The “New Object” labeled in this image is Sedna, a dwarf planet with a 12,000-year orbit around the Sun. It’s a mystery why Sedna has such an elongated orbit.

Image
http://www.sott.net/articles/show/20454 ... ut-Nemesis

The elongated orbit looks like the one Sitchin describes:
Image

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 Post subject: Re: Getting WISE About Nemesis
PostPosted: Fri Mar 12, 2010 4:36 am 
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I dont know LOL :|

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 Post subject: Re: Getting WISE About Nemesis
PostPosted: Fri Mar 12, 2010 5:56 am 
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Very interesting theory, doc! :flop:

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 Post subject: Re: Getting WISE About Nemesis
PostPosted: Fri Mar 12, 2010 2:50 pm 
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Star Systems Hint at Possibility of Sun's Nemesis



Image
The left disk is seen face-on. The narrow disk on the right is tipped nearly edge-on from our point of view. The black central circles are produced by the camera's coronagraph, which blocks out the star so its fainter surroundings can be imaged. Credit: NASA, ESA, and P. Kalas (University of California, Berkeley)



Debris disks discovered around two nearby stars look strikingly like the Kuiper Belt in the outer part of our solar system, astronomers said today. The disks were found in a survey of 22 Sun-like stars by the Hubble Space Telescope. By blocking out light from the central stars, Hubble was able to image dust and other material around the stars. The stars are about 60 light-years away, and the shape of their disks have astronomers pondering the long-debated possibility that our own Sun might have an as-yet unfound companion dubbed Nemesis.

Unseen companions?

Each of the two disks has a sharp outer edge that might be caused by an unseen companion star that gravitationally grooms the material. Our own Kuiper Belt, which contains comets, Pluto and other frozen worlds, is thought to have similarly abrupt outer bound. Unlike younger stars with debris disks-thought to be the stuff of planet formation-these two stars are more than 300 million years old. Things have likely settled into somewhat stable configurations with planets and well-defined debris streams, perhaps similar to our own solar system, which is now 4.6 billion years old. The small sampling of debris disks that have been discovered shows they fall into two categories: those with a broad belt, wider than about 50 astronomical units (AU); and narrow ones with a width of between 20 and 30 AU and a sharp outer boundary, probably like our own Kuiper Belt. An astronomical unit, or AU, is the average distance between the Earth and Sun, about 93 million miles. Our Kuiper Belt is thought to be narrow, extending from the orbit of Neptune at 30 AU to about 50 AU. Most of the handful of known stellar debris disks seem to have a central area cleared of debris, perhaps by planets.

Sun's Nemesis?

Kalas and Graham speculate that stars also having sharp outer edges to their debris disks have a companion-a star or brown dwarf-that keeps the disk from spreading outward, similar to how Saturn's moons shape the edges of some of the planet's rings. "The story of how you make a ring around a planet could be the same as the story of making rings around a star," Kalas said. Perhaps a passing star ripped off the edges of the original planetary disk, but a star-sized companion, remaining in place, would be necessary to keep the remaining disk material from spreading outward, he figures.

The scenario has Kalas and his colleagues thinking that the Sun might also have a companion that keeps the Kuiper Belt confined within a sharp boundary. U.C. Berkeley physics professor Richard Muller has proposed such a star, which he calls Nemesis, but no evidence has been found for one. "These are the types of stars around which you would expect to find habitable zones and planets that could develop life," said lead researcher Paul Kalas of the University of California, Berkeley. The findings will be reported in the Jan. 20 issue of Astrophysical Journal Letters











http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nemesis_(star)
http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A410941
http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/0 ... stars.html

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 Post subject: Re: Getting WISE About Nemesis
PostPosted: Fri Mar 12, 2010 3:15 pm 
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I always thought that it was strange that we have only one sun, while most systems are binary.
It makes sense now reading stories of a disappearing sun, a dark night for some time, that would occur if this 'twin' would pass between the sun and earth.
[edit] I see now that this cannot occur (according to the drawing), oh well then it is even worse as I thought[/edit]

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