June 25, 2020

Since it appears Pluto has had a collapse event, possibly due to interaction with the leading dust wave of the galactic sheet, many have asked – which planet is next in line?

* Saturn will move out of this position in ~ 5-8 years, so it is a good marker for now.

Showing 10 comments
  • VisitingProf
    Reply

    Marvelous, Mr. Ben Davidson! Thank you. This is the sort of report which the entire World’s Human population needs to hear about. This supplies so very much ‘food for thought’ that my ‘thought hopper’ is overflowing! There are even now still so many unknowns yet for one person to have the ‘hutzpah’ to publish such a report as this is fantastic. Unfortunately, ‘We the Peiole’ have seen and heard more than enough ‘Stupid Virus Tricks’ from the powers that ought not to be. Does any one reading this know how we can begin the process of nominating Ben Davidson for a Nobel Prize? Please let us know. Thanks again, Ben.

    • VisitingProf
      Reply

      Please folks, make that read … “We the People” … . Thank you. (I missed that one in my review prior to clicking on “Post Comment.”)

    • Smij
      Reply

      People like you are the reason why humanity is where it is today. Treat them like sheep don’t rock the boat . At least Ben is trying to inform people. . If there were no Bens in this world there wouldn’t be any survivors. So instead of bitching him out you should be thanking him for saving humanity from being totally wiped out because nobody warned us. Do you for one second think our government will give us a heads up if you do then you are one stupid idiot l. That’s last thing they would ever do.

  • Fred Jones
    Reply

    At this point my only thought is the speed of the Galactic Sheet, I’m guessing that’s what we are attributing this change to (which I’m fine with)… and if I was a galactic sheet how long should I take to get from Pluto to Earth… to bad its not the Nexus an extra-dimensional realm. I’m all for a Walden pond realm now… Thank you for the Deeper look Ben, I was glad this was the topic…. So if Uranus is one of the last ones to have an “atmospheric anomaly” (hehe) does that mean the solar system goes out with a fart? Stay safe everyone

  • onezeroseven
    Reply

    You guys are the greatest. FOTW makes me feel like I’m among friends. Glad I bought a membership. My thanks to Adrian for some fine tech-support.

    • onezeroseven
      Reply

      Phfffffffff….. I meant FOTW and Deeper Look. Toodles.

  • Dirt
    Reply

    Hope everyone’s picked out a cave and is practicing their bushcraft skills (meant to be read in a light-hearted yet dead serious tone of voice).

  • Michael Durfee
    Reply

    If Venus spinning slower and Jupiter losing a spot isn’t enough, now we got Pluto losing it’s atmosphere; and with a quickness. It’s got to be eyes open for anomalous activity on those other planets. Tell your local astronomy club!

    How the sun will react when the sheet encounters our outer most layer is going to be the biggest question. How severe will the magnetic declination be? How fast will it reset to its fixed position? Hope we aren’t in a major alignment when it connects…I can see that being a recipe for some low velocity zone upheaval. Will it be a Newton’s cradle type scenario–where the energy is instantaneously transferred between all planetary bodies to the sun? Or more of a slow cascading plinko type scenario–where it looses energy with every planetary encounter? It’s probably going to depend a lot on our configuration at the time. How do you prepare for something like that? Which reminds me I need some new pants…

  • tardis79
    Reply

    thank you for the deeper look. btw a while ago I found a relatively new study saying that this atmospheric collapse is seasonal so it might reappear after some time?https://arxiv.org/abs/1903.02315
    would like to know your take on this. appreciate the work.

  • Terese Nehrbauer
    Reply

    tardis79: a fascinating paper that potentially expands all important context; thanks for sharing with us S0s. I’m not science-qualified to appraise the validity, but from the points and data presented concerning Nitrogen cycles on Pluto alone, it makes sense that the findings in this 2019 paper have significant relevance for interpreting the more recently observed Pluto atmospheric collapse.

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