On 06/03/2015 10:36 PM, salyavin808 wrote:


I'm starting to see why the ancients left the outer planets out of their jyotish charts, these guys are all over the place! A spinning gravitational field would have all sorts of deletirious effects on your day.


They left them out because they couldn't see them. Pluto has a very erratic orbit anyway. But leave it to western astrologers to hang all kinds of interpretations on things like asteroids which really have erratic orbits. That's because their astrological system died around 300 AD. :-D


Still, in a few months all questions will be hopefully answered when we get the first close-up pics of our furthest known planetary partner courtesy of NASA's New Horizons probe. How exciting! Something nobody has ever seen before, doesn't that thrill the soul? Thanks to space exploration this must be the most exciting time ever to have been alive.


Yeah, especially as you may live to see the extinction of the human race the way things are going.


Pluto's moons tumble in orbit, Hubble measurements reveal <http://www.theguardian.com/science/2015/jun/03/plutos-moons-have-chaotic-orbits-hubble-measurements-reveal>



        
image <http://www.theguardian.com/science/2015/jun/03/plutos-moons-have-chaotic-orbits-hubble-measurements-reveal>
        
        
Pluto's moons tumble in orbit, Hubble measurements r... <http://www.theguardian.com/science/2015/jun/03/plutos-moons-have-chaotic-orbits-hubble-measurements-reveal> Analysis of ten years of data from the space telescope has revealed the unusual trajectories, and also suggests Pluto might in fact be a binary dwarf planet
        
View on www.theguardian.com <http://www.theguardian.com/science/2015/jun/03/plutos-moons-have-chaotic-orbits-hubble-measurements-reveal>
        
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