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New Planet Found

New Planet Found

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jimm619

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https://news.yahoo.com/massive-planet-10-times-bigger-224427538.html

MB

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I thought they might have found planet X at first. Not in our solar system. You had my hopes up for a second.

jimm619

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@metal-brain said
I thought they might have found planet X at first. Not in our solar system. You had my hopes up for a second.
No, it's not in our SS, but can you
imagine the size of this orb??
Isn't Earth to Jupiter as a
marble is to a basketball?

Contenchess
Contentious

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@jimm619 said
No, it's not in our SS, but can you
imagine the size of this orb??
Isn't Earth to Jupiter as a
marble is to a basketball?
Basically yes but Jupiter is a gas planet.

s
Fast and Curious

slatington, pa, usa

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@Contenchess
Gas giant, ate too many taco's🙂

MB

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@jimm619 said
No, it's not in our SS, but can you
imagine the size of this orb??
Isn't Earth to Jupiter as a
marble is to a basketball?
Size?

The universe is full of big things. Galaxies have super massive black holes at the center. So somebody found a big planet that could not possibly support life. Big deal.

Has anybody found planet X yet? Call it dark matter.

s
Fast and Curious

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@Metal-Brain
Totally making no sense. But we expect nothing less from you.

bunnyknight
bunny knight

planet Earth

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@jimm619
If it was 10x bigger than Earth and solid, I would be super impressed. It's surface gravity would also be impressive.

If it was 10x bigger than Jupiter and solid, I think it would instantly go into fusion and become a beautiful shiny star.

MB

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@bunnyknight said
@jimm619
If it was 10x bigger than Earth and solid, I would be super impressed. It's surface gravity would also be impressive.

If it was 10x bigger than Jupiter and solid, I think it would instantly go into fusion and become a beautiful shiny star.
That is a good point. Isn't that big enough to be a star?
Fusion comes from gas though. Maybe it is mostly solid and that is why it isn't a star. Not enough hydrogen.

Isn't it a binary star system? How big are the 2 stars relative to each other?

w

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@bunnyknight said
@jimm619
If it was 10x bigger than Earth and solid, I would be super impressed. It's surface gravity would also be impressive.

If it was 10x bigger than Jupiter and solid, I think it would instantly go into fusion and become a beautiful shiny star.
Naive question: Is there a physical size limit for solid objects?

venda
Dave

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@metal-brain said
That is a good point. Isn't that big enough to be a star?
Fusion comes from gas though. Maybe it is mostly solid and that is why it isn't a star. Not enough hydrogen.

Isn't it a binary star system? How big are the 2 stars relative to each other?
I read many years ago,that Jupiter was almost big enough to achieve critical mass at which point fusion would begin and it would have become a star.
Can't remember the numbers ,though I do believe Jupiter is mostly gas which is why it's gravity,though greater than the Earth is not proportional to it's size.

MB

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@venda said
I read many years ago,that Jupiter was almost big enough to achieve critical mass at which point fusion would begin and it would have become a star.
Can't remember the numbers ,though I do believe Jupiter is mostly gas which is why it's gravity,though greater than the Earth is not proportional to it's size.
I think the amount of heavier elements at the core and how big the core is makes a difference. If there is a bigger core of iron and other heavier elements the hydrogen is too far away from the core to fuse into helium.

bunnyknight
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@wildgrass said
Naive question: Is there a physical size limit for solid objects?
Absolutely. Eventually either pressure or gravity will cause something catastrophic to happen. I think the core would undergo fusion long before it collapses into neutron matter.

Scientists still don't know exactly how big a rocky planet can get. So far the biggest rocky planet they found is about 40 Earth masses.

bunnyknight
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@venda said
I read many years ago,that Jupiter was almost big enough to achieve critical mass at which point fusion would begin and it would have become a star.
Can't remember the numbers ,though I do believe Jupiter is mostly gas which is why it's gravity,though greater than the Earth is not proportional to it's size.
Apparently what happens is that planets more massive than Earth attract more gas, and at a certain point the gravity starts pulling and retaining all gas until it's atmosphere is so thick and heavy that it starts to look like Jupiter. If it continues to grow, the solid core eventually ignites via fusion.

MB

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@bunnyknight said
Apparently what happens is that planets more massive than Earth attract more gas, and at a certain point the gravity starts pulling and retaining all gas until it's atmosphere is so thick and heavy that it starts to look like Jupiter. If it continues to grow, the solid core eventually ignites via fusion.
"If it continues to grow, the solid core eventually ignites via fusion."

What is your source of information?

Stop calling it solid. You don't call the earth's core solid, do you? Liquid iron is not solid.

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