What I don't get is what caused them to all fall into a general orbital plane.  How 
come they all orbit on the x-axis and not along the y or z axis.  When you look at 
galaxies, it all rotates along one plane.  All of this dust goes floating throughout 
the universe and approaches our galaxy from 'the top'.  Why would it orbit that way 
rather than fall into an orbit that is reflective of it's original path?  

Michael Corrigan
Programmer
Endora Digital Solutions
1900 Highland Avenue, Suite 200
Lombard, IL 60148
630-627-5055 ext.-136
630/627-5255 Fax
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Rick Eidson 
  To: CF-Community 
  Sent: Thursday, April 18, 2002 9:48 AM
  Subject: RE: The planets lining up


  Pluto and its moons Charon orbit brings it inside of Neptunes orbit about
  every 19-20 years.

  Its orbit is slowed depending on the location of Neptune and Saturn when it
  passes inside Neptunes orbit. This makes a year on Pluto about 248-249
  years.

  Rick

  -----Original Message-----
  From: Lon Lentz [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
  Sent: Thursday, April 18, 2002 9:53 AM
  To: CF-Community
  Subject: RE: The planets lining up


    Pluto's orbit inclination is the greatest from the ecliptic at 17 degrees.

  > -----Original Message-----
  > From: Christopher Olive [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
  > Sent: Thursday, April 18, 2002 10:37 AM
  > To: CF-Community
  > Subject: RE: The planets lining up
  > 
  > 
  > actually, isn't pluto in the plane of the ecliptic, only having a 
  > just slightly more oblate orbit than the other planets?


  
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