The story began many years ago, when Astronomers noticed something.
They were all like "Neptune, you're weird! Why?"
There were no answers.
Finally it came. Pluto.
But then NASA said it was too small.
Then a new answer came. Eris.
And again NASA wanted to keep the mystery open by declaring it too was too small.
SciFi writers came up with their own proposal. Nibiru.
NASA continues to deny the existence of Nibiru. Something about needing "evidence", "facts", "an observation".
Now finally there is a new proposal.
Mysterious Planet Nine hiding beyond Neptune might not be a planet at all - CNET
Do you think there's a planet 9?
They were all like "Neptune, you're weird! Why?"
There were no answers.
Finally it came. Pluto.
But then NASA said it was too small.
Then a new answer came. Eris.
And again NASA wanted to keep the mystery open by declaring it too was too small.
SciFi writers came up with their own proposal. Nibiru.
NASA continues to deny the existence of Nibiru. Something about needing "evidence", "facts", "an observation".
Now finally there is a new proposal.
Mysterious Planet Nine hiding beyond Neptune might not be a planet at all - CNET
Quote
New research published Monday, appearing in Astronomical Journal, has put forth an alternate explanation of this strange phenomenon and suggests that the clustered orbits might not be the result of a Planet Nine at all. A team from the University of Cambridge and the American University of Beirut believe a disc of "small icy bodies" with a "combined mass as much as ten times that of Earth" is responsible for the mystifying orbits.Sorry this was too fun to write.
Do you think there's a planet 9?