STOP PRESS; five new planets discovered

Saturlight

Regular Member
Joined
Jul 11, 2006
Messages
1,197
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Age
58
Website
www.yoootube.com
My Satellite Setup
Motorised dish, dvd players and recorders; a freeview box, broadband, VCRs, four TVs, mobiles, pcs, a mac, Ipod, digital cameras...the lot!
My Location
North Tyneside
Come on, this is ridiculous. Another five planets discovered yesterday by the US telescope.

Rather than saying how many planets in our solor system, and putting them in text books and getting it all wrong, let's cut the crap ( :D ) and just say there's "loads". :D
 

PaulR

Dazed and Confused Admin
Staff member
Joined
Jun 28, 2003
Messages
18,026
Reaction score
4,046
Points
113
My Satellite Setup
-----------See sig-----------
My Location
Wirral, NW UK and Vaucluse, France.
Are they planets or are they plutoids?
 

PaulR

Dazed and Confused Admin
Staff member
Joined
Jun 28, 2003
Messages
18,026
Reaction score
4,046
Points
113
My Satellite Setup
-----------See sig-----------
My Location
Wirral, NW UK and Vaucluse, France.
Or is it plutons - can't remember.
 

Saturlight

Regular Member
Joined
Jul 11, 2006
Messages
1,197
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Age
58
Website
www.yoootube.com
My Satellite Setup
Motorised dish, dvd players and recorders; a freeview box, broadband, VCRs, four TVs, mobiles, pcs, a mac, Ipod, digital cameras...the lot!
My Location
North Tyneside
Said they were planets on news, Paul. :)
 

spiney

Guest
Joined
Apr 29, 2005
Messages
1,514
Reaction score
1
Points
0
My Satellite Setup
Pace 2200 Sky digibox with ftv card, Comag SL65 FTA sat receiver, 40cm Sky minidish, Setpal terrestrial receiver (for free uk tv only!).
My Location
Midlands
Well, obviously, a nearby neighbouring solar system has too many planets, and can't get rid of them, so is dumping them in ours. Just wait till we catch them at it ......
 

Channel Hopper

Suffering fools, so you don't have to.
Staff member
Joined
Jan 1, 2000
Messages
35,646
Reaction score
8,592
Points
113
Age
59
Website
www.sat-elite.uk
My Satellite Setup
A little less analogue, and a lot more crap.
My Location
UK
We need some more, preferably a bit closer to us than Mars.
(maybe on the same orbit as the Earth)
 

Razor

Retired Mod
Joined
Sep 30, 2002
Messages
1,319
Reaction score
0
Points
0
My Location
Ireland
Won't see it in my life time, but some day we will be able to relocate planets and park them just as sats are parked.

3+earth could be accommodated in our orbit.
 

PaulR

Dazed and Confused Admin
Staff member
Joined
Jun 28, 2003
Messages
18,026
Reaction score
4,046
Points
113
My Satellite Setup
-----------See sig-----------
My Location
Wirral, NW UK and Vaucluse, France.
3+earth could be accommodated in our orbit.

Don't think so. Minor pertubations in gravity would inevitaly cause the planets to congregate together and coalesce as one.

This is how the solar system built up as each planet swept up all the matter within its gravitational field on its orbit.
 

spiney

Guest
Joined
Apr 29, 2005
Messages
1,514
Reaction score
1
Points
0
My Satellite Setup
Pace 2200 Sky digibox with ftv card, Comag SL65 FTA sat receiver, 40cm Sky minidish, Setpal terrestrial receiver (for free uk tv only!).
My Location
Midlands

Channel Hopper

Suffering fools, so you don't have to.
Staff member
Joined
Jan 1, 2000
Messages
35,646
Reaction score
8,592
Points
113
Age
59
Website
www.sat-elite.uk
My Satellite Setup
A little less analogue, and a lot more crap.
My Location
UK
spiney said:
Yes, PaulR, agreed!

The only stable positions are Lagrange Points:

http://www.esa.int/esaSC/SEMM17XJD1E_index_0.html .

(Goerge Smith's famous Venus Equilateral stories used this!).


Not quite.

One thing the Lagrange theory overlooks is the gravitational pull of the object that is placed at the 'point', which is why it is usually classed as an observer.
Once a planet is put in the spot, it's own gravitational pull (coupled with it's size, and any other eccentricities of orbit due to mass displacement) is likely to knacker the whole solar system.
 

spiney

Guest
Joined
Apr 29, 2005
Messages
1,514
Reaction score
1
Points
0
My Satellite Setup
Pace 2200 Sky digibox with ftv card, Comag SL65 FTA sat receiver, 40cm Sky minidish, Setpal terrestrial receiver (for free uk tv only!).
My Location
Midlands
The 3 body problem is always approximate, as Ch Ho should realise! Lagrange's theory does not "overlook" anything. (quite frankly, this remark - about one of the greatest ever mathematical astronomers - is surprisingly ignorant).

Solutions to 3 - or more - bodies are always via approximation techniques, "good enough" for all practical purposes, within the limits of experimental and calcuation accuracy.

Anyone wishing to follow up Lagrange or "3 body problem" weblinks may do so, use google, I won't bother giving any.
 

Razor

Retired Mod
Joined
Sep 30, 2002
Messages
1,319
Reaction score
0
Points
0
My Location
Ireland
If we can park them, then we can keep them parked. That's what the big parking thingy is good at. Sats use fuel to keep in slot we can use the our parking thingy.

See it even has a name. Hope it's a Honda one and not a Fiat one, they keep breaking down.
 

Channel Hopper

Suffering fools, so you don't have to.
Staff member
Joined
Jan 1, 2000
Messages
35,646
Reaction score
8,592
Points
113
Age
59
Website
www.sat-elite.uk
My Satellite Setup
A little less analogue, and a lot more crap.
My Location
UK
spiney said:
(Goerge Smith's famous Venus Equilateral stories used this!).

followed by

spiney said:
The 3 body problem is always approximate, as Ch Ho should realise! Lagrange's theory does not "overlook" anything. (quite frankly, this remark - about one of the greatest ever mathematical astronomers - is surprisingly ignorant)

followed by

spiney said:
Solutions to 3 - or more - bodies are always via approximation techniques, "good enough" for all practical purposes, within the limits of experimental and calcuation accuracy.
Anyone wishing to follow up Lagrange or "3 body problem" weblinks may do so, use google, I won't bother giving any.

If I recall, 'Goerge Smith' dabbled with faster than light communication in at least one of his stories.:confused

Theory does not equate to reality, it is a theory. Spiney should (have) know(n) ;) that there is never certainty in anything, and all scientists work on the basis that nothing is absolute.

Anyone wishing to check what 'theory' actually means may do so, I will bother giving starters.:)

Pronunciation: 'thE-&-rE, 'thir-E
Function: noun
Inflected Form(s): plural -ries
Etymology: Late Latin theoria, from Greek theOria, from theOrein
1 : the analysis of a set of facts in their relation to one another
2 : abstract thought : SPECULATION
3 : the general or abstract principles of a body of fact, a science, or an art <music theory>
4 a : a belief, policy, or procedure proposed or followed as the basis of action <her method is based on the theory that all children want to learn>
4 b : an ideal or hypothetical set of facts, principles, or circumstances -- often used in the phrase in theory <in theory, we have always advocated freedom for all>
5 : a plausible or scientifically acceptable general principle or body of principles offered to explain phenomena <the wave theory of light>
6 a : a hypothesis assumed for the sake of argument or investigation
6 b : an unproved assumption : CONJECTURE
6 c : a body of theorems presenting a concise systematic view of a subject <theory of equations>
 
Top