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The 12th Planet is far closer than anyone would expect. Comet behavior is anticipated to follow the speed and route of the

dirty snowballs that humans call comets. These have a tiny mass compared to the mass of the 12th Planet, and thus engage

neither the gravity attraction or repulsion force interactions that the 12th Planet does with the Sun and surrounding planets.

Dirty snowballs are held at a distance by the solar wind alone, not the repulsion force, and thus the gravity pull differs little from their extra-solar placement and their placement within the solar system where they are visible to man. Their speed,

thus, barely increases during the course of their passage. The 12th Planet, 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!

The 12th Planet is circling on a long elliptical orbit around the sun and its dead companion which lies at a distance some

18.724 times the length from the sun to Pluto. It is not a long distance to be traveled in 3,657 years, especially considering

that it transverses the solar system in 3 short months [Note: see 2003 Date explanation, as it lingers near the Sun and does not speed past]!

Clearly, the uptick in speed is considerable, and the rate of speed as it floats from one binary sun to the other is sedate in

comparison. Thus, when the passage is due in 2003 [Note: see 2003 Date explanation], 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 the 12th Planet takes to make a complete ellipse (3,657), and the approximate May 15, 2003 date

[Note: see 2003 Date explanation] of the next passage. The distance will differ greatly, thus, depending upon the date.

At the turn of the millennium the 12th Planet 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. What makes it

move and progress from one sun to the next? The fact that there is a slight momentum, and this is a slight momentum.

When the 12th Planet overshoots and goes to the far side of one of its suns, before it turns around and comes back on its

narrow track, it is vulnerable. This orbit is not what human astronomers might paint, as it is like a train track between the

two suns and slightly beyond, in each case. The 12th Planet is also vulnerable to the call of the wild when it lies between

the two suns, should the larger universe present something that would draw it away.

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ZetaTalk: Retrograde Orbit

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ZetaTalk: Retrograde Orbit

Note: written on Jan 15, 1997. Planet X and the 12th Planet are one and the same.

As we have mentioned, the 12th Planet's approach at this time, as viewed from Earth, has it essentially standing still.

Just as the appearance of the flight of a bird might have it bobbling up or down at bit in flight, as it approaches the

observer, if viewed from above the flight the path would appear straight, and if viewed from the side where the rapid

forward progress of the bird is more dramatic than any bobble up or down due to its beating wings, the path would

likewise appear straight. This false illusion of motion when the observer is not at an angle that presents the true motion

of the object being viewed is especially true if the observer is also in motion. If the observer is running toward the

bird, rocking to the right and left in his running stride, the bobbling of the bird is compounded by the eyes-view of the

human runner so that it appears to be jiggling side to side too.

Astronomers are well aware that the apparent retrograde motion of the outer planets is in fact due to the more rapid

orbit of the Earth. Draw a line from the Sun through the Earth and on out to a planet such as Jupiter. Both are

revolving around the Sun in a counterclockwise manner as viewed from above the ecliptic, up above the North Pole.

Yet due to the faster motion of the Earth, Jupiter would appear to be to the left of the Earth, then to the right, and thus

appear to be moving left to right around the Sun, a clockwise motion. Bearing in mind that appearances can be

deceiving, and just why that is, the following is what humans can expect to observe as the 12th Planet approaches for

its periodic passage.

As we have mentioned, the path the 12th Planet takes between its two foci is like a train track, the path in one

direction lined like a straight line next to the path in the other direction. However, this direct path does not hold

when the giant nears one of its foci, passes, and turns around on the opposite side for the return trip.

The 12th Planet's Retrograde Orbit around the Sun is due to its reaction to an energy field emitted by the Sun.

This energy field radiates out from the Sun intensely at certain points, like a moving arm, following the rotation

of the Sun's core where the matter producing this energy field is located. Where the non-traveling planets are in

essence swept along before this intense energy field, like dust balls in front of a broom, the 12th Planet is not so

trapped.

Approaching from a distance, the 12th Planet reacts to this energy field by trying to evade it, and takes the path

of least resistance. Like children skipping rope, if one jumps toward the rope the passage of the rope happens

fastest. The sweeping arm of this energy field coming from the Sun passes by quickly out in space where the

12th Planet rides at a distance, but builds in intensity and takes longer to sweep past the closer the 12th Planet

comes.

When at a distance, this energy field affects the 12th Planet but slightly, so it reacts as it approaches from its

second foci on the near parallel orbit tracks that it travels upon when moving between its two foci by orbiting in

the same manner planets close to the Sun do. It sweeps before this energy field as the field passes, moving

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ZetaTalk: Retrograde Orbit

slightly at these times to the left, in the same counterclockwise manner that the other planets do.

As the 12th Planet approaches, moving steadily closer and picking up speed due to the gravity tug of the Sun, the

energy field from the Sun is more intense and takes longer to sweep past. The 12th Planet's reaction to this is

still a slight movement sweeping ahead of this energy field, but as the energy field passes is then a stronger jerk

backwards, away from the passing arm of the Sun's energy field.