ZetaTalk: Science

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ZetaTalk: Science Page 18

by Nancy Lieder


  an equilibrium is reached. To you, who see that distance is maintained, it looks like the lack of influence. It is balanced

  influence. Were you to have seen your galaxy born, clumping into masses with these masses first attracted and then to

  some degree repulsed by each other, motion initiated as a result of these opposing forces, you would intuitively

  understand that large bodies that cease motion do so not because there is no influence upon them and not because they were not at one time in motion, but because they came to a situation where they essentially are in a dither. The

  influences upon them are balanced.

  This second foci of the 12th Planet has not been located by your astronomers because it is dark, not lit, and does not

  happen to block any view your astronomers are particularly interested in. They think it empty space. Unlike the Sun,

  this dark twin never lit. Although comparable in size and mass, its composition was subtly different, and it has no

  potential for becoming a lit sun under the present conditions in your part of the Universe. It has no planets of any size

  to mention, though is orbited by a lot of trash. Should one wish to search for it, it stands at an angle of 11 degrees off

  the Earth's orbital plane around the Sun, in the same direction we have given for the approach of the 12th Planet. Not

  being a luminous body, and not giving off any radiation detectable by human devices, you will be unable to locate it,

  but this does not mean that it is not there. Do you, like a child with his hands over his eyes, think that if you cannot see something that it does not exist?

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  ZetaTalk: Distance from Earth

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  ZetaTalk: Distance from Earth

  Note: written on Nov 15, 1999. Planet X and the 12th Planet are one and the same.

  The 12th Planet is far closer than anyone would expect. Comet behavior is anticipated to follow the speed and route of the

  dirty snowballs that humans call comets. These have a tiny mass compared to the mass of the 12th Planet, and thus engage

  neither the gravity attraction or repulsion force interactions that the 12th Planet does with the Sun and surrounding planets.

  Dirty snowballs are held at a distance by the solar wind alone, not the repulsion force, and thus the gravity pull differs little from their extra-solar placement and their placement within the solar system where they are visible to man. Their speed,

  thus, barely increases during the course of their passage. The 12th Planet, on the other hand, heads straight toward the sun,

  deflected not at all by the solar wind, and avoids a collision with the sun and the other planets only due to the repulsion

  force incited by its approach. Thus, its speed increases as it is essentially plummeting into the sun!

  The 12th Planet is circling on a long elliptical orbit around the sun and its dead companion which lies at a distance some

  18.724 times the length from the sun to Pluto. It is not a long distance to be traveled in 3,657 years, especially considering

  that it transverses the solar system in 3 short months [Note: see 2003 Date explanation, as it lingers near the Sun and does not speed past]!

  Clearly, the uptick in speed is considerable, and the rate of speed as it floats from one binary sun to the other is sedate in

  comparison. Thus, when the passage is due in 2003 [Note: see 2003 Date explanation], there is an exponential increase in speed during the last years, and this speeding up has already started. To compute the distance from the solar system on any given

  date, create an exponential equation which takes into consideration the total distance we have given for the sun's dead

  companion, the years the 12th Planet takes to make a complete ellipse (3,657), and the approximate May 15, 2003 date

  [Note: see 2003 Date explanation] of the next passage. The distance will differ greatly, thus, depending upon the date.

  At the turn of the millennium the 12th Planet is still close to the mid-point between the two foci, as astonishing as this may

  seem. It spends the vast majority of its time in an essential dither these two massive suns, picking up speed as it

  approaches, inbound, then zooming through, turning around after coming to a standstill after having overshot the solar

  system, then shooting through again and returning to the essential dither point between the its two foci. What makes it

  move and progress from one sun to the next? The fact that there is a slight momentum, and this is a slight momentum.

  When the 12th Planet overshoots and goes to the far side of one of its suns, before it turns around and comes back on its

  narrow track, it is vulnerable. This orbit is not what human astronomers might paint, as it is like a train track between the

  two suns and slightly beyond, in each case. The 12th Planet is also vulnerable to the call of the wild when it lies between

  the two suns, should the larger universe present something that would draw it away.

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  ZetaTalk: Retrograde Orbit

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  ZetaTalk: Retrograde Orbit

  Note: written on Jan 15, 1997. Planet X and the 12th Planet are one and the same.

  As we have mentioned, the 12th Planet's approach at this time, as viewed from Earth, has it essentially standing still.

  Just as the appearance of the flight of a bird might have it bobbling up or down at bit in flight, as it approaches the

  observer, if viewed from above the flight the path would appear straight, and if viewed from the side where the rapid

  forward progress of the bird is more dramatic than any bobble up or down due to its beating wings, the path would

  likewise appear straight. This false illusion of motion when the observer is not at an angle that presents the true motion

  of the object being viewed is especially true if the observer is also in motion. If the observer is running toward the

  bird, rocking to the right and left in his running stride, the bobbling of the bird is compounded by the eyes-view of the

  human runner so that it appears to be jiggling side to side too.

  Astronomers are well aware that the apparent retrograde motion of the outer planets is in fact due to the more rapid

  orbit of the Earth. Draw a line from the Sun through the Earth and on out to a planet such as Jupiter. Both are

  revolving around the Sun in a counterclockwise manner as viewed from above the ecliptic, up above the North Pole.

  Yet due to the faster motion of the Earth, Jupiter would appear to be to the left of the Earth, then to the right, and thus

  appear to be moving left to right around the Sun, a clockwise motion. Bearing in mind that appearances can be

  deceiving, and just why that is, the following is what humans can expect to observe as the 12th Planet approaches for

  its periodic passage.

  As we have mentioned, the path the 12th Planet takes between its two foci is like a train track, the path in one

  direction lined like a straight line next to the path in the other direction. However, this direct path does not hold

  when the giant nears one of its foci, passes, and turns around on the opposite side for the return trip.

  The 12th Planet's Retrograde Orbit around the Sun is due to its reaction to an energy field emitted by the Sun.

  This energy field radiates out from the Sun intensely at certain points, like a moving arm, following the rotation

  of the Sun's core where the matter producing this energy field is located. Where the non-traveling planets are in

  essence swept along before this intense
energy field, like dust balls in front of a broom, the 12th Planet is not so

  trapped.

  Approaching from a distance, the 12th Planet reacts to this energy field by trying to evade it, and takes the path

  of least resistance. Like children skipping rope, if one jumps toward the rope the passage of the rope happens

  fastest. The sweeping arm of this energy field coming from the Sun passes by quickly out in space where the

  12th Planet rides at a distance, but builds in intensity and takes longer to sweep past the closer the 12th Planet

  comes.

  When at a distance, this energy field affects the 12th Planet but slightly, so it reacts as it approaches from its

  second foci on the near parallel orbit tracks that it travels upon when moving between its two foci by orbiting in

  the same manner planets close to the Sun do. It sweeps before this energy field as the field passes, moving

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  ZetaTalk: Retrograde Orbit

  slightly at these times to the left, in the same counterclockwise manner that the other planets do.

  As the 12th Planet approaches, moving steadily closer and picking up speed due to the gravity tug of the Sun, the

  energy field from the Sun is more intense and takes longer to sweep past. The 12th Planet's reaction to this is

  still a slight movement sweeping ahead of this energy field, but as the energy field passes is then a stronger jerk

  backwards, away from the passing arm of the Sun's energy field.

  The backward reaction is due to the nature of the sweeping arm, like the cutting edge of a knife most intense at

  the cutting edge of the arm, but with more bulk of the energy field trailing after the cutting edge. Thus, as the

  sweeping arm of this energy field passes the 12th Planet, which in no way could stay ahead of this sweeping

  arm at the distance it is from the Sun, the 12th Planet's reaction to the bulk of the energy field is longer lasting

  and begins to produce a retrograde orbit for its approach to the Sun.

  Thus, during 1995 through 1998, the 12th Planet will drift left and up toward the elliptic, aligning itself in the

  same manner as the planets to the Sun's sweeping arm, but due to its mobility out in space, its distance from the

  Sun, it develops a retrograde orbit and begins to move to the right, in the manner the ancients recorded.

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  ZetaTalk: Entry Angle

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  ZetaTalk: Entry Angle

  Note: written on Aug 15, 1995. Planet X and the 12th Planet are one and the same.

  While it is out in space the 12th Planet moves slowly, but increases speed rapidly as it comes close to one of its two

  foci. When the 12th Planet is passing your Sun it is moving rapidly, the time spent within your outer planet Saturn's

  orbit a mere 3 months [Note: see 2003 Date explanation]. It zips by.

  It does not head directly into the Sun, as there is a play between attraction and repulsion which exists between all

  planetary bodies. The distance maintained is determined by these forces, relative to the mass and speed of the two

  objects - your Sun and the passing 12th Planet. All comets tracked do not have a mass sufficient to trigger a strong

  repulsion force in the planets they pass or the Sun, and thus the humans ephemeris assume the only elements to

  consider are the path and the speed. For a tiny comet, if the path is such that it brings the comet too close to a planet,

  there is a collision, as the repulsive force generated in a planet is not strong enough to repulse a tiny comet. Thus

  comet orbits assume that the comet is simply slinging toward the Solar System, and this math works due to their

  relatively tiny size. Humans assume that if on the initial orbit into the Solar System the result was such that the tiny

  comet headed into the Sun, they did not become a regular visitor, a returning comet. However, in the case of the 12th

  Planet, which has a mass much greater than the Earth, the repulsion force is a factor. Mathematically this is equal to

  the force of gravity when the two objects are close enough to touch, or they would in fact touch.

  Simply stated, the faster the 12th Planet moves, the closer it can come, although the math in this matter is not quite that

  simple. Where it would seem that the 12th Planet is coming dead on, and in fact month after month and even year after

  year would be found in approximately the same place in the skies, nevertheless, as it approaches your Solar System,

  things change. The 12th Planet is both attracted and repulsed by your Sun. Why is it that comets do not just head for

  the Sun, and there stop? This is not a one-way issue. Both factors are at play. Thus, as the 12th Planet approaches your

  Sun, it picks up speed but also shies away. There is a battle going on, a tug in one direction with a push in another. The

  end result is that the 12th Planet still comes on, full bore, but veers to the side a bit as it approaches. As it is still

  picking up speed, the speed compensates for the repulsion, and the 12th Planet finds in the last few months that it can

  now come closer to the Sun, the repulsion being balanced by the speed.

  Thus, when it gets to its maximum speed, entering your Solar System, it bends in toward your Sun, after having veered

  outward slightly, so that the angle is approximately 32 degrees. This angle can vary slightly depending on influences

  upon the 12th Planet in its long journey away from your Sun. For this passage, the 12th Planet's first pass will be at a

  time when the Earth is on the same side of the Sun as the 12th Planet's point of passage, but toward the rear of the Sun.

  Thus the 12th Planet will come into the Earth's orbital plane not directly between the Earth and the Sun, but forward,

  somewhat closer to the 12th Planet's approach. When one is looking toward Orion, at this time, from above the Earth's

  orbital plane, the perspective human astronomers prefer, the Sun will be to the right. The Earth, Sun, and 12th Planet

  will thus Form a Triangle in the Earth's orbital plane with a 23 degree angle at the Earth, an 18 degree angle at the Sun, and a 139 degree angle at the 12th Planet. It is at this point, essentially, that the 12th Planet is closest to the Earth, as

  with the angle of entry into the Earth's orbital plane being 32 degrees at this point, the 12th Planet essentially dives up

  through the Earth's orbital plane and quickly passes on.

  The 12th Planet pulls down and away from your Sun only at the last minute. This is reflected in time as the last 9.7

  weeks or 68 days [Note: see 2003 Date explanation]. This is reflected in distance as 1.2598 times the orbital diameter of Pluto, or two and one-half times the distance from your Sun to this farthest known planet which you call Pluto. The

  shape of the deviation is parabolic at the angle of turns, in all cases. This is not exact, but for purposes of calculating

  an orbit is something you can work with that will be close enough. Thus, the 12th Planet starts its deviation from its

  straight path in a parabolic manner, but has scarcely started to turn away when its increasing speed allows it to come

  closer to the Sun and it does another parabolic curve back toward the Sun, essentially correcting its path again to be

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  ZetaTalk: Entry Angle

  straight toward the Sun. When it passes the Sun, piercing the Earth's orbital plane, it has come to the point in a

  parabolic curve where the line is essentially straight.

  The distance of deviation from the
orbital line, which is essentially a straight line toward the Sun on the approach, is

  not great, approximately 37 million miles. This relatively slight distance is enough to grant the 12th Planet the sharper

  angle it seeks. At this point the orbit of the 12th Planet has been altered, as the Sun is the only giant it is listening to.

  The 12th Planet maintains this line of orbit as it leaves the Solar System and travels out. In the scheme of things, this

  puts a slight lift in the orbit, as though the orbit between the two foci were your arm, extended out from your body,

  and the part of the orbit past the Sun were your hand. If you lifted your hand at the wrist slightly, a 21 degree lift, you

  would simulate what the 12th Planet's orbit is doing at this point. The 12th Planet maintains this deviation until it again

  passes your Sun, the second pass. It does not find it necessary to pull away from the Sun on this second pass, as the

  angle is correct to begin with.

  It should be understood that the reason for the deviation in the first place is that the other planets in the Earth's orbital

  plane are also entering into the equation. The 12th Planet in essence pulls away from this orbital plane, as well as from

  the Sun. It does not want to move in along side the other planets, it wants to cross quickly at a sharper angle. Thus, the

  return orbit is comfortable in this regard. Having passed the Sun again on the second pass, and moving far enough

  from the Sun and the planets in the orbital plane to feel free of their influence, the 12th Planet again begins to listen to

  the second foci. Thus, it again makes a parabolic curve to head straight toward the second foci. Here the 12th Planet is

  somewhat further from the Sun than the measurement we have mentioned for the approach, as the second foci is

  farther away and has less influence at this point.

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  ZetaTalk: Conflict

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