To be more precise, Imperial College London is the place from where the original doom predictions about the lethality of covid-19 originated. And they were all proven false one year later.<\/p>\n
Aiming to prove \u2013 or rule out \u2013 the existence of another big planet beyond Neptune, the UK scientist decided to conduct a new analysis of data collected by the Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS) in 1983.<\/p>\n
The astronomer has looked through some 250,000 point sources detected by the telescope, which took a far-infrared survey of 96% of the sky. Having analyzed the data, keeping in mind the hypothetical planet\u2019s size and distance, \u201cat the very limit of the survey,\u201d he singled out a moving object that the satellite picked out on three occasions.<\/p>\n
The candidate for\u00a0Planet 9 would be up to five times the mass of Earth<\/strong>, according to the IRAS data. Its orbital distance would be some 225 times farther than that of our planet, equaling about 33.7 billion kilometers (20.9 billion miles) from the Sun.<\/p>\nIf the enigmatic object is indeed rotating around the Sun at such a distance, it would be extremely cold and not much sunlight would be reflected by it, making it even more elusive and harder to find. While the latest study is not a clear detection, it could be valuable as guidance for where exactly to search for the new planet, the astronomer concluded.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
This is probably part deux of the government hoax agenda, a goofy kook hoax, as so-called experts are now claiming that there’s a planet out there, bigger than ours, with a 1000 years long orbit, that will return soon and all that jazz.<\/p>\n
I don’t think Planet X is real, or aliens, and if you are paying attention, legacy media is neck deep promoting an alien agenda.<\/p>\n
When it comes to Planet X stuff, people like \u00a0Zecharia Sitchin are known for falsyfing translations of ancient Sumerian tablets in order to claim that they talked about aliens and Planet X.<\/p>\n
Zecharia Sitchin went so far as to write a book called The 12th Planet, as well as other books promoting this kook conspiracy. The book was in heavy rotation on the History Channel.<\/p>\n