Re: Recent Planet X Sighting???
In Article <[email protected]> Paul Schlyter wrote:
> A planet 5 times more distant than Pluto would have to be
> at least approximately 20 TIMES LARGER THAN OUR SUN,
> or else it will appear as a point source of light to the unaided eye.
> ... Therefore the claim that there is a planet 5 times more distant
> than Pluto which is big enough to appear as an extended disk
> to the naked eye is nonsense.
Thank you Paul. This again supports what the Zetas stated, that an
observatory scope is needed at this time. Let us not be confused about
what unaided eye or naked eye mean. Im not sure what Paul means by
these terms, but ZetaTalk means naked eye to be looking through a
scope with your eyeball, with all the limitations that involves - the
range of light our eyes can perceive, the intensity of light before our
eye registers an object at all, etc.. This is versus using imagine
equipment to increase the range of light registered or to check for
motion over time, a change in position, etc. Some information on
visibility and how this will change during the approach, from the
ZetaTalk and Troubled Times site:
Planet X is about 9 Sun-Pluto distances away. Troubled
Times members have computed the distance from Earth,
based on ZetaTalk information given, as 9.012 Sun-Pluto
multiples on May 7, 2001.
It outweighs the Earth by some 23 times, but by size is not
23 times as large as its weight is due to its makeup, having
less silicon than the Earth, for instance. Should one line
these planets up side by side, the Earth would look to [Planet X]
as the Moon does to the Earth. ... In the tug of war regarding
magnetic alignment, the 12th Planet's mass gives it a 4-to-1
advantage. There is no contest.
ZetaTalk
The problem is that the normal eye, even when scanning a
photo, would miss it as it is a faint blurr, rather than the
pin-point expected. Infrared works well, but requires
equipment in the hands of few. Red filtering, aggressive red
filtering, will bring it to the fore more than anything.
ZetaTalk
Your hope for an early brightness will not be met, as the
12th is too far away for reflected sunlight up until 6 months
before passage. Likewise, it does not grow in size to where
it is obvious that is not a fading nova at a great distance until
it begins to reflect sunlight. Thus, up until these last few
months, the excuse that this is a faded nova of sorts will be
put forth, and even supported by doctored images.
ZetaTalk
It was known that at this time, approximately Feb 1, 2001,
[Planet X] would be visible without question to an observatory.
ZetaTalk
Although the 12th Planet at present is a magnitude 2.0,
astronomers should include objects up to a magnitude 10 in
their image capture. The image capture results should be
passed through a red filter, as most equipment is calibrated
to locate the pinpoint brightness of stars, rather than a diffuse
glow.
The naked eye [i.e. not a computer] will begin to register
increased brightness approximately 1 year 7 months before
the cataclysms, or late in the year 2001.
ZetaTalk
The comet will be visible to the [unaided] eye for
approximately 7.3 weeks, certainly no less than 43 days,
prior to [the shift]. ... During the last few weeks, back yard
astronomers will be able to detect motion of the comet across
the skies, something a distant star would not do.
ZetaTalk