Robin van Spaandonk wrote:

In reply to thomas malloy's message of Thu, 27
Jones Beene wrote:

Robin,

Suppose that the Sun orbits about a black hole once every 27000 years
approximately.

Although that cannot be ruled out, there seems to be no good evidence AFAIK that a black hole has been documented nearby (and perhaps cannot be situated anywhere other than a galactic core) ... or is there?


Good point Jones, AFAIK, a black hole, or a dark star would swallow any something like this was incoming, it would light up the EMF spectrum like a flood light, and given the efforts of the radio astronomers, there is no way we'd overlook it.


I said "orbits" not "incoming".
Regards,

Excuse me, I got your comments mixed up with the antimatter asteroids. Orbits how far from the sun? with what results?


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