| Subject: Re: NASA Spotted Gigantic Sphere UFO Near Sun 2012 !!! |
| From: Brad Guth |
| Date: 30/05/2012, 14:09 |
| Newsgroups: alt.alien.research,alt.alien.visitors,alt.astronomy,alt.fan.art-bell,alt.paranet.ufo |
On May 29, 6:06 pm, Brad Guth <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote:
On May 28, 3:30 pm, Sir Gilligan Horry <G...@ga7rm5er.com> wrote:
NASA Spotted Gigantic Sphere UFO Near Sun 2012 !!!
Cool Stuff ...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w1capJeRoqI
I mean Hot Stuff !!!
Either it's just Nature
or it's something like the
"Wisdom of Several Races",
or it's AREA-51 !!!
Hagar, your shout for Bacon Avocado Burgers,
we are saved ! :)
________________________________
A little 3~10 meter asteroid slipped under the radar. They only spotted
it when it was right about to zip past us.
"(KTVI)-An asteroid is buzzing by Earth on Tuesday. Newly-discovered
asteroid 2012 KT42 is flying past Earth today (May 29th) only ~14,000
km above the planet’s surface. This means 2012 KT42 will actually fly
inside the Clark Belt of geosynchronous satellites. The 3- to 10-meter
wide asteroid ranks # 6 on the top 20 list of closest-approachers to
Earth."
http://fox2now.com/2012/05/29/space-news-from-dave-murray/
"first obs.used 2012-05-28"
It just as easily could have been a 30 meter asteroid of mostly iron,
thorium or platinum. So, once again we're just damn lucky.
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I've been saying this for quite some time, that the rather
considerable Sirius Oort cloud should be interacting with our own Oort
cloud of somewhat stray/wandering items. There's also an ongoing
suggestion of our solar system having a dark 3e25 kg outer planet that
hasn't been visually spotted by astronomy, but has to be there because
of the other elements within our solar system getting perturbed, not
to mention the terrific gravitational influence of the all-inclusive
Sirius star system that could be worth 3.5 Ms and closing in at 7.6 km/
sec, but if all goes well should miss directly interacting with our
solar system by more than a light year.
Because of the original mass and somewhat recent Sirius(B) demise, the
complex Sirius Oort cloud mass should be worth at least a hundred fold
that of ours, though I'd gladly bet on a thousand fold, and our
predicting those interactions is going to remain as next to
impossible.
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