Article: <5enp9i$pjn@dfw-ixnews6.ix.netcom.com>
From: saquo@ix.netcom.com(Nancy )
Subject: Re: Hale-Bopp THEN and NOW
Date: 22 Feb 1997 21:43:14 GMT
This debate has been cross-posted to sci.astro.amateur, sci.astro.planetarium, sci.space.news, and alt.paranormal as CNN did not choose to list sci.astro among the Usenet sites where information on Hale-Bopp could be located. Check
for the sci.astro debate thread history.
In article <5elfet$11fc@news.ccit.arizona.edu> Jim
Scotti writes:
>> (Begin ZetaTalk[TM])
>> There is NO comparison here, as the turnaround of comets
>> out in space, outside of your view, is a COMPLETE
>> UNKNOWN!
>
> Well, I guess Sir Edmund Halley was wrong. Even though
> comet Halley disappears off into the far reaches of the
solar
> system where we can't see it any more ...
>
> Further, there are other comets whose orbits take them out
> beyond Neptune, including P/Swift-Tuttle and P/Herschel-
> Rigollet which have been seen at more than 1 perihelion
> passage.
>jscotti@LPL.Arizona.EDU (Jim Scotti)
(Begin ZetaTalk[TM])
All comets within your Solar System which at all times have more
gravity pull to the side than to the back. You're proving our
point here, Jim!
(End ZetaTalk[TM])
In article <5elfet$11fc@news.ccit.arizona.edu> Jim
Scotti writes:
>> (Begin ZetaTalk[TM])
>> Bottom line, you have the comet entering at point A,
circling
>> around the Sun and leaving at point B, then going out
into
>> space and SOMEHOW, magically, moving from point B to
>> point A again for a re-entry into the Solar System. The
>> explanation given is that it forms an ellipse, which is
a
>> DESCRIPTION of what you are viewing during the
>> limited time it is in the Solar System, not an
explanation ...
>> The comet, shooting AWAY from the Sun, has more pull
>> backwards than sideways, in the extreme. So why would it
>> move to the side, dramatically, from point B back to
point A?
>
> Because it is in orbit around the sun - a predictable
elliptical
> orbit similar to the orbits of all the planets (though much
more
> eccentric).
> jscotti@LPL.Arizona.EDU (Jim Scotti)
(Begin ZetaTalk[TM])
Picture that eccentric orbit! It's moving AWAY from the Solar
System, the comet slowing down. Your geometry requires it to
mirror the turnaround, out in space, that occurred when the comet
went round the Sun. What gravity focus does it have way out in
space? Unlike bodies within your Solar System, an eccentric orbit
has the body in an essential straight-away from the Sun, the
gravity to its BACK. In this situation, it would slow to a halt.
Beyond the issue of the lack of a second focus, where would it
get its momentum to move from point B to point A?
(End ZetaTalk[TM])
In article <5elfet$11fc@news.ccit.arizona.edu> Jim
Scotti writes:
>> (Begin ZetaTalk[TM])
>> The current explanation for comet behavior doesn't even
>> take into consideration recent evidence that comet
orbits
>> form more of an ice cream cone shape than an elliptical
>> shape. This gets published and promptly forgotten, as
the
>> adjustment in thinking give astronomers a headache.
>
> Ice cream cone shape? Where did you ever get that idea?
> Conical sections (i.e. cuts through a cone) go from circular
> if straight across, to elliptical if at an angle that goes
through
> both sides, to parabolic and to hyperbolic.
> jscotti@LPL.Arizona.EDU (Jim Scotti)
Jim, I myself have seen an article on that issue, though I can't remember where it was published, some years ago but within the decade. Speculation based on new observations due to the Hubble, I believe, that comet orbits were not as had been assumed, and leading to the speculation that perhaps the orbit shape looked more like an ice cream cone. The Zetas are confirming that shape. Check the diagram at: