Channel: Matrix Disclosure
Category: Science & Technology
Tags: saturnsolar systemresearchersdwarf planetsplanetplutojupitergravitationalcarnegie institution for scienceplanetoidswhat ifuranusscientistsgravitational effectsneptuneearthuniverseadditional planetdisk of gasouter spacerocky planets
Description: According to a team of scientists from the Carnegie Institution for Science, an additional planet between Saturn and Jupiter was thrown out of the solar system while it was still in the "infancy" stage. An Additional Planet Between Saturn and Jupiter Was Kicked Out of the Solar System These findings refine our understanding of the forces that determined our Solar System's unusual architecture, including the ejection of an additional planet between Saturn and Jupiter, ensuring that only small, rocky planets, like Earth, formed inward of Jupiter. The theory suggests that the Sun was once surrounded by a disk of gas and dust. Following several collisions, planets began to form, orbiting our star at a relatively short distance. Rather, the team's best-fitting model indicates that, instead, with both of those created by Saturn, Jupiter most definitely performed two trips around the universe, contributing to something similar to the solar system design we have today. The researchers have concluded that several external variables determined the orbits of Uranus and Neptune. This includes the Kuiper belt's gravitational effects, the doughnut-shaped ring of frozen artefacts, including Pluto and other dwarf planets and planetoids, as well as the consequence of another universe of ice that was knocked out of its orbit. #matrixdisclosure #solarsistem #planet9