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Author Topic:   Are there other planets in our solar system?
AquaRay

Cool Novice

Posts: 19
From:baltimore,md,21212
Registered: Feb 2001

posted February 13, 2001 12:14 AM

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We all know of the basic 9 planets in the milky way galaxy but that is all.Scientist are constently looking for new planets have they found any?


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chesty

Cyborg

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From:
Registered: May 1999

posted February 13, 2001 12:15 AM

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we found #10 and possibly more.

------------------
At my signal unleash hell.
Strength and Honor
The frost, sometimes it makes the blade stick.
Death smiles at us all. All we can do is smile back.


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MR. BMJ

Pro Bodybuilder

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posted February 13, 2001 12:43 AM

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I guess that changes the ol' saying:

My-------------------Mercury
Very-----------------Venus
Educated-------------Earth
Mother---------------Mars
Just-----------------Jupiter
Served---------------Saturn
Us-------------------Ur-anus
Nine-----------------Neptune
Pizzas---------------Pluto

Interesting!!!
MR. BMJ


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The Whole F/N Show

Elite Bodybuilder

Posts: 1131
From:Atlanta, GA USA
Registered: Jun 2000

posted February 13, 2001 12:48 AM

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You'd think they come come up with a better name for a planet than Uranus.

------------------
http://www.fnshow.com


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CrazyThug

Amateur Bodybuilder

Posts: 55
From:on da streets slangin thangs
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posted February 13, 2001 04:09 AM

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Maybe they could rename it CrazyThug.


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rimmer

Amateur Bodybuilder

Posts: 77
From:Finland
Registered: Jul 2000

posted February 13, 2001 04:34 AM

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They could name it Myanus or "a place where the mile long alien dick fucks wet horny underage mutant women"


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SMASH NZ

Amateur Bodybuilder

Posts: 161
From:NZ
Registered: Aug 2000

posted February 13, 2001 07:05 AM

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There 9 in our solar system but there have been a couple of dozen extrasolar planets discovered by now.
Astromoners can't actually see the planets but they can tell they are there because the stars they travel around move slightly and they can measure that.
So far they are all big gas giants like jupiter and saturn, no earth-like planets.

[This message has been edited by SMASH NZ (edited February 13, 2001).]


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AquaRay

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Posts: 19
From:baltimore,md,21212
Registered: Feb 2001

posted February 13, 2001 07:14 PM

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What are the names of Saturn's moons does anyone know? Because I don't.


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SMASH NZ

Amateur Bodybuilder

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From:NZ
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posted February 13, 2001 09:52 PM

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Saturns moons are:
Titan
Rhea
Iapetus
Dione
Tethys
Mimas
Enceladus
Hyperion


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latona

Pro Bodybuilder

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From:
Registered: Nov 2000

posted February 13, 2001 10:31 PM

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Recently, scholars at the Museum of Natural History in New York just claimed that Pluto is not a planet, but an asteroid. It's orbit is not on the same plane as the other planets and apparently, it's density and chemical composition differ, too. I don't remember all of the details, but if you go to the museum and see their diarama of the solar system, it doesn't include Pluto. If they're right, that would only leave 8.


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chesty

Cyborg

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posted February 13, 2001 11:42 PM

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There have been recent reports of a tenth and 11th planet within our solar system. This has been discovered by the pertubation of the orbit of Pluto. Pluto is a planet, just because it is not in the same plane, (none of the planets are) it is much larger than any comet, and what is a planet anyway? The outer four giants Saturn, Jupiter, Uranus and Neptune are all gaseous bodies, while Venus, Earth and Mars are solid bodies with atmoshpheres and Mercury is a hunk of rock. Pluto is thought to be either a hunk of rock like Mercury or an ice body.

Neptune I believe has its spin axis aligned with the plane of its orbit. That makes for one odd creature in our solar system. Geometric oddities exist and that does not make something not a planet.

Yes, proto planets, proto stars and proto galaxies have been observed. Some by the wobbles in a stars spin and others by direct observation using the Hubble telescope.

But I would suggest doing a search on planet x as it is called right now, although I seem to remember it being given a name.

------------------
At my signal unleash hell.
Strength and Honor
The frost, sometimes it makes the blade stick.
Death smiles at us all. All we can do is smile back.


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chesty

Cyborg

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posted February 13, 2001 11:45 PM

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Here is just one link.

http://itss.raytheon.com/cafe/qadir/atenth.html

------------------
At my signal unleash hell.
Strength and Honor
The frost, sometimes it makes the blade stick.
Death smiles at us all. All we can do is smile back.


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chesty

Cyborg

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From:
Registered: May 1999

posted February 13, 2001 11:48 PM

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Here is another more interesting link
http://www.xfacts.com/x2.htm

------------------
At my signal unleash hell.
Strength and Honor
The frost, sometimes it makes the blade stick.
Death smiles at us all. All we can do is smile back.


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latona

Pro Bodybuilder

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posted February 13, 2001 11:56 PM

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Chesty - I was just sharing what I read on the New York Times site. here's a brief quote:
quote:

What we decided was rather than count planets, which we don't do out there, rather than saying who is a planet and who isn't, we say that the solar system has families of objects, and when we organize the information, organize the members of the solar system, in families.

Then the very mention of a family conveys information. So we have the terrestrial planets, and any time we talk about Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, we mention the grouping. And then we talk about the asteroid belt, and then the Jovian planets and then the Kuiper Belt of comets, including Pluto that's orbiting out there.


the link to the full article is: http://www.nytimes.com/2001/02/13/science/13PLUT.html

but I think you might need to register on their site to access it.


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SMASH NZ

Amateur Bodybuilder

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From:NZ
Registered: Aug 2000

posted February 14, 2001 12:34 AM

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Isn't it amazing just how big all of this is, our star is just one of 2 billion or so in our galaxy, and our galaxy is just one of countless million's other galaxies.

I hope in my lifetime we travel out of our solar system and reach the stars but being realistic I guess that won't happen.


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rimmer

Amateur Bodybuilder

Posts: 77
From:Finland
Registered: Jul 2000

posted February 14, 2001 06:55 AM

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yeah SMASH, that's what I have always thought, makes one feel dizzy )


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AquaRay

Cool Novice

Posts: 19
From:baltimore,md,21212
Registered: Feb 2001

posted February 14, 2001 10:11 AM

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Do you think that there is life on other planets in other galaxies?


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Puc

Elite Bodybuilder

Posts: 1218
From:Indy, the
Registered: Jan 2000

posted February 14, 2001 10:19 AM

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AquaRay, it would be obsurd to think their wasn't ever(btw fuck the Drake equation, it proves nothing). However, in all likelihood their distance from us is so great and/or they existed in this universe during another time so we will never see them...

I was under the impression that Pluto's (and charons) chemical composition was similar to that of a commet. This would make some sense considering the oort cloud and all...

puc out...


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AGENT SHAGWELL

Mutant

Posts: 3080
From:cryogenically frozen somewhere in FL
Registered: Aug 2000

posted February 14, 2001 10:25 AM

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AuayRay...you should go look for it ...right away...time is of the essence darling!!!


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chesty

Cyborg

Posts: 4637
From:
Registered: May 1999

posted February 14, 2001 10:39 AM

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We are not really sure what the composition of Pluto is. What constitutes a planet? Planet x is possibley 1 to 10 times the size of Jupiter. It may actually be a brown dwarf or a failed star, which is different than Jupiter.

Why should the Drake equation be ignored? It is just a statistical probability of the number of intelligent civilizations from what I remember. All it is saying is that here is one possibility for the number. We have no reference to start from, not even remotely. So, he had to start somewhere and he made an assumption. Is that so bad?

Yes, you can group things into family's and members, but astronomers still refer to the individual bodies as planets and anything that is orbiting a planet is a moon, and from what I understand there is no clear cut definition of what does or does not constitute a planet. Pluto is large enough to affect the orbit of Neptune and that effect is what led to the search for pluto.

Now, all the comets I know of are not large enough to produce any measureable affect upon a body so large as Neptune or for that matter the Earth or Mercury which is about the same size as Pluto if I remember correctly, maybe a bit larger.

------------------
At my signal unleash hell.
Strength and Honor
The frost, sometimes it makes the blade stick.
Death smiles at us all. All we can do is smile back.


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