Planet X: Distance/Speed REVISITED #1
Per Open Minded's note that today's Live ZetaTalk Chat will be about
this topic, here's the background on the Distance/Speed issue. Will take
a couple of posts to cover.
The ZetaTalk on Planet X distance from Earth, with diagram, written in
October, 1999 and Jan, 2000, explains that it dallies at the mid-point
between its two foci, the Sun and its dead twin some 18.74 Sun-Pluto
distances away. Here the Zetas state an "exponential increase" in speed
from the essential mid-point in the Year 2000 until passage in 2003.
Dirty snowballs are held at a distance by the solar
wind alone, not the repulsion force, ... Their speed,
thus, barely increases during the course of their
passage. [Planet X], on the other hand, heads
straight toward the sun, deflected not at all by the
solar wind, and avoids a collision with the sun and
the other planets only due to the repulsion force
incited by its approach. Thus, its speed increases
as it is essentially plummeting into the sun! ... At
the turn of the millennium [Planet X] is still close
to the mid-point between the two foci, as
astonishing as this may seem. It spends the vast
majority of its time in an essential dither these two
massive suns, picking up speed as it approaches,
inbound, then zooming through, turning around
after coming to a standstill after having overshot
the solar system, then shooting through again and
returning to the essential dither point between the
its two foci. ... Thus, when the passage is due in
2003, there is an exponential increase in speed
during the last years, and this speeding up has
already started. To compute the distance from
the solar system on any given date, create an
exponential equation which takes into
consideration the total distance we have given
for the sun's dead companion, the years [Planet X]
takes to make a complete ellipse (3,657), and the
approximate May 15, 2003 date of the next
passage. The distance will differ greatly, thus,
depending upon the date.
ZetaTalk, Distance from Earth
(http://www.zetatalk.com/science/s100.htm)