Odd Bod

What is this:

Some sort of a blip over Greenland?

An American take-over?

Seriously, what is going on?

I am asking Jehovah God, as It has me worried. Not that I am scared of anything massive erupting although it does look like some very warm weather is being driven this way. All of these anticyclones presented on the North Atlantic look like something sequential, of note, is happening on the other side of the world.

Pluto and Mercury are starting to align with the sun so there is that and I believe Mars is yet to leave its alignment but I can’t tell and anyway these triple and quadruple meetings shoud take place regularly.

The orbit of Mercury is the shortest orbital period of any planet in the solar system, taking about Earth days to complete one orbit around the Sun. Its orbit is highly eccentric, varying in distance from approximately 46 million kilometers (28.58 million miles) at its closest to about 70 million kilometers (43.49 million miles) at its farthest. Therefore we should have one every 88 days ,176, 264, 352… no hang on, we should have tow earthquakes in each spell caused by each planet. Excuse me not working all this out before, I tend to shy from maths, being dyscalculiac or thick.

The orbit of Venus is, God, I wouldn’t recommend Nasa sites, they act like they think we are all 5 years old: “day” would be 243 Earth days long – longer even than a Venus year (one trip around the Sun), which takes only 225 Earth days. For another, because of the planet’s extremely slow rotation, sunrise to sunset would take 117 Earth days. And by the way, the Sun would rise in the west and set in the east, because Venus spins backward compared to Earth. This is all very nice to know but none of us will ever go there. Moron.

The orbit of Earth is If you don’t know that you should not be here, trust me.

The orbit of Mars is I really don’t know that: Orbit and Rotation. As Mars orbits the Sun, it completes one rotation every 24.6 hours, which is very similar to one day on Earth (23.9 hours). Martian days are called sols – short for “solar day.” A year on Mars lasts 669.6 sols, which is the same as 687 Earth days. Mars’ axis of rotation is tilted 25. I don’t think that I am any brighter now.

Once the planets separate I am going to watch out for the Martian quakes, then I shall tell you about them.

The orbit of is Jupiter I don’t believe any of this. The orbit of is Saturn c’mon maaan, I don’t believe that: Jupiter is a world of extremes. It’s the largest planet in our solar system – if it were a hollow shell, 1,000 Earths could fit inside. It’s also the oldest planet, forming from the dust and gases left over from the Sun’s formation 4.6 billion years ago. But it has the shortest day in the solar system, taking about 9.9 hours to spin around once on its axis. NASA is run by the potato. I can not believe its rotation is only 10 hours, it must be fluid all the way down if that is the case.

It would make sense though, imagine the effect the quakes would have with such a near planet of that size. I can’t. Seriously, I can’t imagine it. Imagine all Jehovah has to do to wipe us all out. But if it were liquid its ball would elongate. Boy, I don’ want to play with this stuff any more. In a world where men were of consequence this rubbish would be proscribed.

The orbit of is Uranus …I need to find a way of asking these questions, I must be too intelligent to be a rocket scientist.

Hang on in a planet that allows free speech, their must be place for rocket scientists to dwell in order for them to produce the unmitigated spew with gay abandon like the roses of first love. Let us enter the puerile lychgate: Gardy loo, Uranus’ environment is not conducive to life as we know it. Well I never; whatever will they think of next?

With an equatorial diameter of 31,763 miles (51,118 kilometers), Uranus is four times wider than Earth. If Earth was the size of a nickel, Uranus would be about as big as a softball. In a world devoid of free speech Rocket Scientists would be required to grow up. I’d like to propose that no adult male should allowed to become a rocket scientist, this might dispense with softball analogies in astronomy.

Uranus makes a complete orbit around the Sun (a year in Uranian time) in about 84 Earth years (30,687 Earth days). Ferginhal this stuff would make a saint swear when they are not dobbing choir boys. So we can ;ook for earthquakes caused by Uranus some 84 tears plus the time to orbit. Hang on that is 84 earthqukas x 2 less the time it takes. I have got to think about that.

Every time the earth passes an outer planet we have 2 earthquake reactions, All outer planets do that to us. And scientists have never noticed! Good grief!!

It never occurred to me they could be so dismissive of the staring truth. Oh my goodness me how has Jehovah God put up with us?

Thinking more about that, the cores of the outer planets, the larger ones at least, may be producing multiple quakes for all that I know. That is the first speculation that might be revealed as so. I am far to old and ill to do this research alone. I would hate to have the canaanites take over this stuff for commercial propositions.

We need to start assembling spectrometers that can investigate what is really going on in the outer planets we have nothing, less than nothing on them. And now, at last the field of speculation about them is about to approach the science of creation. https://www.edinst.com/events/

The outer planets must be made of gravel held together by wish fulfilment. How do they work?

I had always imagined they were solid cored, corr, I have some thinking to do.

According to the despised wikipedia: eighth and farthest known planet from the Sun. It is the fourth-largest planet in the Solar System by diameter, the third-most-massive planet, and the densest giant planet. It is 17 times the mass of Earth. Compared to its fellow ice giant Uranus, Neptune is slightly more massive, but denser and smaller. Being composed primarily of gases and liquids,[21] it has no well-defined solid surface, and orbits the Sun once every 164.8 years at an orbital distance of 30.1 astronomical units (4.5 billion kilometres; 2.8 billion miles).

Pluto according to the people that do not know what causes earthquakes: Pluto (minor-planet designation134340 Pluto) is a dwarf planet in the Kuiper belt, a ring of bodies beyond the orbit of Neptune. It is the ninth-largest and tenth-most-massive known object to directly orbit the Sun. It is the largest known trans-Neptunian object by volume by a small margin, but is less massive than Eris. Like other Kuiper belt objects, Pluto is made primarily of ice and rock and is much smaller than the inner planets. Pluto has roughly one-sixth the mass of the Moon, and one-third its volume. Originally considered a planet, its status was changed when a new definition of the word was adopted by astronomers.

I imagine the journeys to the other stars will start with Pluto or one of the lesser masses but all trails there will lead to Earth or Mars. Mars is the most likely as it is large enough to sustain engineering, lacks a dangerous atmosphere and has a low gravity. I dare say it will hold powerful fuels for spacecraft. These fuels might not be the first choice as they may be poisonous but by the time of sizeable exploration, the craft should be autonomous. The ones designed to leave the Solar System certainly will be, they were in the 1950’s and 60’s for the ships to the moon.

 exploration of the Moon since 1959. there is no limit to the heroism for scheduelling someone or something else.

The first partially successful lunar mission was Luna 1 (January 1959), the first probe to leave Earth and fly past another astronomical body. Soon after that the first Moon landing and the first landing on any extraterrestrial body was performed by Luna 2,[1] which intentionally impacted the Moon on 14 September 1959. The far side of the Moon, which is always facing away from Earth due to tidal locking, was seen for the first time by Luna 3 in (7 October 1959). In 1966, Luna 9 became the first spacecraft to achieve a controlled soft landing,[2] while Luna 10 became the first mission to enter orbit, and in 1968 Zond 5 became the first mission to carry terrestrial lifeforms (tortoises) to close proximity of the Moon through a circumlunar approach.[3]

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