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Message Subject THE RETURN OF THE DESTROYER, NIBIRU, PLANET X, DRAGON, DARK STAR, BROWN DWARF, ECT...
Poster Handle Anonymous Coward
Post Content
Thread: Holy Christ..what a whole hell is this.. Could it really be “the destroyer”? (Page 4)

Hallo,
can someone perhaps explain this photos from the sun an another object, taken from me 10.01.2009 in South-Germany:

[link to picturepush.com]
[link to picturepush.com]
[link to picturepush.com]

Be sure, no fake, just tried out with colours and negative filters.

Can someone explain ? Is this perhaps Mars near sun ?

Thanks


Interesting… no question it’s a solid round object just close to the sun (from our view seen)
Quoting: Anonymous Coward 888540


I've tried again to find out, what the object was:

[link to www.neave.com]

for time 01/10/2009 10 o'clock in the morning for my

position in South-Germany showed following picture:

[link to picturepush.com]

I only found the sun alone, but no known planet at the position like in the photos above.

Here a tip to another page:
[link to www.answerbag.com]
with question
"Do you think that our Sun may have a twin (i.e binary system) somewhere in our solar system?"
with answer 1:
by Carnivalius on July 7th, 2007

"I would say that it would be incredibly unlikely that the sun has a twin. For the sun to have a twin would require there to be another star gravitationally bound within our solar system. This would be easy to spot as you would have a bright star that would be incredibly bright. Also the gravitational pull of the star itself would great very noticeable pulls on the planets themselves as in our solar system roughly 99.8% of the total mass (of the solar system) is just in our sun alone. You can and do get stars much smaller than ours, but they would significantly outweigh any planet in our solar system as they have a minimum mass at which they can start fusion.

The only other way it would hide is if its a brown dwarf (a cold dead star that emits no light), these are impossible to see, but again it would have to be far enough away that it has no obvious pull on the orbits of the planets (either in a highly eccentric orbit or a more spherical orbit far away). This would make it very weakly bound to our solar system if at all by gravity...so I would say very unlikely. "

->
My explanation because of the solid body of the near sun planet in my photos:
a brown dwarf / twin of the sun has come back to our solar system !
At the moment most times unvisible for human eye !
 
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