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View Full Version : Debris trail from unseen comet’s orbit indicates it may pose potential danger to Eart



mick silver
4th August 2011, 09:36 AM
http://theextinctionprotocol.wordpress.com/2011/07/29/debris-trail-from-unseen-comets-orbit-indicates-it-may-pose-potential-danger-to-earth/ ...
Posted on July 29, 2011 (http://theextinctionprotocol.wordpress.com/2011/07/29/debris-trail-from-unseen-comets-orbit-indicates-it-may-pose-potential-danger-to-earth/) by The Extinction Protocol (http://theextinctionprotocol.wordpress.com/author/theextinctionprotocol/)
http://t3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTbENQ0gHuVPxxg0595hVTezpGBP7ATN tCQn2BrdCw3RFxL7EeDJuly 29, 2011 – PASADENA, CA – A stream of dusty fragments from a comet born in the outermost reaches of the solar system has hit the Earth on a path that leads astronomers to conclude the comet itself could be “potentially hazardous” if it crashes into the planet. The comet’s location is unknown, making it difficult to say when it will approach Earth, but “the orbits of the dust trail tells us that the comet is on a path that could eventually hit us,” said Peter Jenniskens, an astronomer at the SETI Institute and the NASA Ames Research Center in Mountain View. “It’s very unlikely,” he conceded Wednesday. “Such impacts are extremely rare in Earth’s history.” The trail of dust grains, known as meteoroids, were shed by the comet long ago as it passed the Sun and Earth on a long orbit that could have taken thousands of years to complete, Jenniskens said. The comet was born billions of years ago and trillions of miles away in the cold comet nursery called the Oort Cloud, and streams of the comet’s dusty progeny have returned to Earth once or twice every 60 years or so when their orbits come under the influence of Saturn and Jupiter, Jenniskens said. Sixty specialized cameras that operate at UC’s Lick Observatory, the Fremont Peak Observatory and a ground-based site, formerly in Mountain View but now in Lodi under a project called Cameras for Allsky Meteor Surveillance, constantly monitor the night sky for meteoroids. Jenniskens said he was scanning the orbits of the dust stream’s fragments from images snapped at Fremont Peak and in Mountain View on Feb. 4 when he noted a tightly linked cluster of six objects streaming at nearly 80,000 mph in a shower seven hours long. “I couldn’t believe my eyes at first,” he said. But once he had had determined the identical orbits of the fragments he teamed with Finnish astronomer Esko Lyytinen to predict that the dust trail will return in 2016, again in 2023, and once again in 2076. –Seattle PI (http://www.seattlepi.com/national/article/Unseen-comet-s-orbit-indicates-possible-crash-1631753.php)

keehah
4th August 2011, 12:44 PM
Extinction protocol is a disinfo site IMO. They take the worst crap from the MSM and spin it further, usually by chaning the title. So landslide on the edge of a ravine becomes "sinkhole" for example. In this case most of the spin is from the mainstream article itself. Basically the article just points out that meteor showers on earth means a comet passed through that spot once.


“potentially hazardous” if it crashes into the planet
To restate: If something still exists in the solar system, it could hit the earth one day, and if this ever happens, it may or may not be a hazard.