Tenth Planet Discovered

    For years Astrologers have proposed that at least twelve planets exist.  The
    asteroid belt has been estimated to be the remaining fragments of at least
    one planet. Other hypothesised planets have been assigned estimated
    positions in the cosmos.  Now, not to any astrologers surprise, we recently
    have received the detailed NASA report about a newly discovered planet.
    Astrology compatibility and birth charts use signs, planetary positions,
    aspects (angular relationships) to create meaningful charts.  Many
    astrologers have for years incorporated potential effects that might be
    created from yet undiscovered planets.


    NASA-Funded Scientists Discover Tenth Planet
    July 29, 2005

    A planet larger than Pluto has been discovered in the outlying regions of the
    solar system.

    The planet was discovered using the Samuel Oschin Telescope at Palomar
    Observatory near San Diego, Calif. The discovery was announced today by
    planetary scientist Dr. Mike Brown of the California Institute of Technology in
    Pasadena, Calif., whose research is partly funded by NASA.

    The planet is a typical member of the Kuiper belt, but its sheer size in relation
    to the nine known planets means that it can only be classified as a planet,
    Brown said. Currently about 97 times further from the sun than the Earth, the
    planet is the farthest-known object in the solar system, and the third brightest
    of the Kuiper belt objects.

    "It will be visible with a telescope over the next six months and is currently
    almost directly overhead in the early-morning eastern sky, in the constellation
    Cetus," said Brown, who made the discovery with colleagues Chad Trujillo, of
    the Gemini Observatory in Mauna Kea, Hawaii, and David Rabinowitz, of Yale
    University, New Haven, Conn., on January 8.

    Brown, Trujillo and Rabinowitz first photographed the new planet with the 48-
    inch Samuel Oschin Telescope on October 31, 2003. However, the object was
    so far away that its motion was not detected until they reanalyzed the data in
    January of this year. In the last seven months, the scientists have been
    studying the planet to better estimate its size and its motions.

    "It's definitely bigger than Pluto," said Brown, who is a professor of planetary
    astronomy.

    Scientists can infer the size of a solar system object by its brightness, just as
    one can infer the size of a faraway light bulb if one knows its wattage. The
    reflectance of the planet is not yet known. Scientists can not yet tell how much
    light from the sun is reflected away, but the amount of light the planet reflects
    puts a lower limit on its size.

    "Even if it reflected 100 percent of the light reaching it, it would still be as big
    as Pluto," says Brown. "I'd say it's probably one and a half times the size of
    Pluto, but we're not sure yet of the final size.

    "We are 100 percent confident that this is the first object bigger than Pluto
    ever found in the outer solar system," Brown added.

    A name for the new planet has been proposed by the discoverers to the
    International Astronomical Union, and they are awaiting the decision of this
    body before announcing the name.

    For more information and images see:

    http://www.nasa.gov/vision/universe/solarsystem/newplanet-072905-images.
    html

        
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