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Message Subject
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THE RETURN OF THE DESTROYER, NIBIRU, PLANET X, DRAGON, DARK STAR, BROWN DWARF, ECT...
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Poster Handle
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Astromut |
Post Content
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...
No response? Typical.
Quoting: Astromut Lol, you're funny Astro....you know that's the point, TBar does know what he's doing. Quoting: Tuff~Kooky If you're implying he or I are lying, it's up to you to prove it. I just don't don't have 100% trust of just anyone remaking Harrington's analysis anyway.
Quoting: kookyGenerating an orbital diagram using Harrington's own data isn't "remaking Harrington's analysis." You could do it yourself if you were even halfway competent on the subject. Harrington probably had more details to that, but I'm sure that's all gone, if not locked up in Iron Mountain somewhere or somewhere similar.
Quoting: kookyThe details are all right there in the paper that TBar presented, discussed, and linked to. And I'm not so sure either if Harrington's Planet X theory is not true either.
Quoting: kookyI am. Thread: Robert Harrington's Planet X Does Not Exist * Show me where I'm wrong.Or is Planet X/Nibiru a Dwarf Star of some kind?
Quoting: kookyThat would make it even more massive and even more wrong. Quoting: Astromut * There is more than reasonable doubt in my mind, that the data you have to work with from Dr. Harrington may not only be inaccurate, but also INCOMPLETE. Quoting: Tuff~Kooky Then it's up to you to prove it by providing a scan of the paper he published listed above showing that the actual journal article contains different and additional information from what is available online. Quotes from source
Quoting: kookyYour source is a joke. Either provide a scan of the hardcopy of the journal showing it differs from the documents previously listed or you've got nothing at all. ....By analyzing time-lapse photographs using the "blink comparison" technique, originated by famed Pluto discoverer, Clyde Tombaugh, Dr. Harrington proved that Planet X was indeed inbound into our Solar System.
Quoting: KookyLMFAO! First of all, prove it, second of all, Clyde Tombaugh used blink comparison but he did not invent the technique. Carl Pulfrich did so in 1900, and though his application was originally for microscopes, Max Wolf immediately adapted it for astronomy and astrophotography (he had been trying to develop it himself as early as 1892). Again, your source is a joke written by a nutjob who knows nothing about astronomy.
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