It’s possible that a nearby star could have passed close to our solar system and disturbed the orbits of TNOs (Trans-Neptunian Objects), like Goblin. It might explain why some of their orbits seem odd. Scientists are still looking into different ideas, including the possibility of Planet Nine affecting these orbits too. Thanks for sharing your thoughts!
Planet X and Planet 9 are actually different. Planet 9 is a hypothetical planet beyond Neptune, while Pluto is classified as a dwarf planet. Thanks for sharing your thoughts!
@Paultricounty Planet 9 was pondered when it was realized shortly after Pluto was found in 1930 it cannot affect the orbits of TNO's. Might have been a visit from a star. There is an explanation for the TNO's orbit.
Great video! Will y'all be talking about this latest geostorm from the sun? I have friends in Oklahoma and the panhandle of Texas that were able to see the auroras. Beautiful, yes, but why so many all of a sudden? It's seems strange.
So the astronomer astrophysicist or whatever, the guy who reclassed pluto, yeah I reclassified him as a janitor and restored pluto to planet 9 status. Cmon science boy fight me
since you dont want to consider pluto as a dwarf, Please add all the other around 150 dwarf planets already found to your planet list. Hope you remember them all.
well, as an Egyptian ShiekhUmarKhan is totally easy for me to pronounce, you've actually butchered the pronunciation of it but it's fine! 😅 I don't really expect any western to be comfortable with Arabic/Persian/Urdu or Pashto pronunciation, so based on that I fully agree with changing these names into something easier for almost all people
2015 TG387 is so small in fact that it’s smaller than other celestial objects such as 90377 Sedna, Enceladus, Mimas, Proteus, Miranda, Nereid. This is in my own work after doing significant research in the past. Proteus and Nereid are both moons of Neptune, they are a lot smaller than Triton. Enceladus and Mimas are moons of Saturn. 90377 Sedna is a trans-Neptunian object beyond Pluto and the Kuiper Belt. 2015 TG387 is named Leleākūhonua.
Some scientists have suggested the possibility of a nearby brown dwarf or a binary star system, but there's no solid evidence for it yet. The idea of Planet Nine is based more on the unusual orbits of objects like Goblin. Thanks for watching!
No... Leleakuhonua was "The name was suggested by students in the Hawaiian-language program" and it stuck. If I was Hawaiian I wouldn't be claiming that the name isn't hard to pronounce. We live in a mutli-cultural society folks.
@stevehobdell466 I lived in the Philippines for years. The countries of the region used to name the typhoons. I don't remember any being unpronounceable. BTW, the world's biggest typhoon was called Haiyan (prounced hi yan). A name that people from around the world can say regardless of what language they speak.
Maybe the difficulty to pronounce Hawaiian names for English speaking people is a small price to pay for sticking telescopes on the top of their sacred mountains.
@@External2737 Sure, But stick em in space or on the moon. Make space exploration for all of humanity and not a vanity project for rapacious capitalists.