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She came from Planet Nine ......
#1
Planet Nine Is Real And It Just Became the Biggest Discovery in Our Solar System in Over 170 Years.

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After nearly a decade of mystery and speculation, Planet Nine has officially stepped out of the shadows and it’s nothing short of revolutionary. This long-theorized world, hidden deep in the icy darkness beyond Neptune, has now been visually confirmed by astronomers, rewriting what we thought we knew about our own cosmic neighborhood. It's a massive, icy giant, estimated to be five to ten times the mass of Earth, and it takes a staggering 10,000 to 20,000 years to make just one full orbit around the Sun.

The story began with peculiar movements in the Kuiper Belt, a region teeming with frozen rocks and space debris past Neptune. These strange gravitational disturbances, first noted by Caltech researchers in 2016, hinted at something powerful and unseen. For years, Planet Nine remained a theoretical ghost disputed, dismissed, and chased across the sky by astronomers using every tool at their disposal. But now, thanks to state-of-the-art telescopes and deep-space imaging, scientists have captured direct visual evidence of this elusive celestial giant.

Planet Nine’s orbit is wildly elongated, placing it tens of billions of kilometers from the Sun roughly 20 times farther than Neptune. Its unique distance and cold, shadowy surroundings are why it managed to stay hidden until now. Unlike Pluto, which was demoted to dwarf planet status, Planet Nine meets all the criteria of a true planet: it’s massive, it orbits the Sun, and it exerts gravitational dominance over its orbital zone. That makes it the first officially recognized new planet in our solar system since Neptune’s discovery in 1846.

Now that it’s confirmed, the big questions begin: How did Planet Nine form? Could it have moons? What else might be lurking in the farthest reaches of space? The discovery has reinvigorated the hunt for distant planetary bodies and promises to unlock secrets about the formation and boundaries of our solar system.

I think they should call it the Planet Gong, TRD Nugget. 



Cool
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#2
very good , thanks TRD.
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#3
Cool
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