Article: <[email protected]>
From: [email protected](Nancy )
Subject: Re: 12th Planet - any photos ?
Date: 23 Feb 1997 17:51:50 GMT
Article: <[email protected]>
>> last gasp of a dying star, a faint, blurry, reddish
glow. Your
>> eye would pass over it if attuned to the pin points that
are
>> the stars.
>> (End ZetaTalk[TM])
>
> What is the object's RA/dec coordinates, and apparent
> diameter in arcseconds or whatever is convenient. Or its
> actual diameter in kilometers, and distance in kilometers,
> or any convenient units. Even when Mars is at 2nd
> magnitude, it's just as easy to spot as a 2nd magnitude
star.
> [email protected] (Jedidiah Whitten)
Jed, as I've mentioned before, you can get the RA and Dec from the Troubled Times web site graphic which shows the view from Earth against a SkyMap diagram of Orion, Taurus, and Aries. This graphic is at:
(Begin ZetaTalk[TM])
Your nearby planets are throwing back at you a familiar light,
reflected sunlight, and thus your eyes RECOGNIZE them for what
they are. Just as some insects camouflage themselves from those
who would prey on them by adopting the coloration of the
surrounding area, just so the 12th Planet, TO YOU, is camouflaged
against the night sky. Its appearance DOES NOT look like the
familiar objects you set out to identify when you scan the sky -
pin points with intense centers that are stars or the scattered
brilliance of an exploding star or the distinctive elongated
fantail of a passing comet. Where its size, at present is akin to
a star, and the diffuse light across its surface would indeed
have the spread and consistency that your reflecting planets do,
there are significant differences that cause you to pass over it
rather than explore it in depth.
Regarding its distance at present, we decline to give this to
you or others on this message board at this time. Its distance,
in fact, is UNNECESSARY for the purposes of locating this in the
skies from Earth, especially as it is coming straight at its
gravity focus, the Sun. In fact, discussion of distance would
alarm, and distract the populace of amateur astronomers from
searching for it. Once it has been located, we will get more
specific.
(End ZetaTalk[TM])