20 Questions Answered Directly by Dr.David Morrison (Director of the NASA Lunar Science Institute) about Niburu and Doomsday 2012 – Part 2
11. When most of the planets align in 2012 and planet Earth is in the center of the Milky Way, what will the effects of this be on planet Earth? Could it cause a pole shift, and if so what could we expect?
There is no planet alignment in 2012 or any other time in the next several decades. As to the Earth being in the center of the Milky Way, I don’t know what this phrase means. If they are referring to the Milky Way Galaxy, we are some 30,000 light years from the center of this spiral galaxy. We circle the galactic center in a period of 225-250 million years, always keeping approximately the same distance. Concerning a pole shift, I also don’t know what this means. If it means some sudden change in the position of the pole (that is, the rotation axis of the Earth), then that is impossible, as noted above. What many websites do discuss is the alignment of the Earth and Sun with the center of the Milky Way in the constellation of Sagittarius. This happens every December, with no bad consequences, and there is no reason to expect 2012 to be different from any other year.
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read moreEARTH, A PLANET
I INTRODUCTION
Earth (planet), one of nine planets in the solar system, the only planet known to harbor life, and the “home” of human beings. From space Earth resembles a big blue marble with swirling white clouds floating above blue oceans. About 71 percent of Earth’s surface is covered by water, which is essential to life. The rest is land, mostly in the form of continents that rise above the oceans.
Earth An oxygen-rich and protective atmosphere, moderate temperatures, abundant water, and a varied chemical composition enable Earth to support life, the only planet known to harbor life. The planet is composed of rock and metal, which are present in molten form beneath its surface. The Apollo 17 spacecraft took this snapshot in 1972 of the Arabian Peninsula, the African continent, and Antarctica (most of the white area near the bottom).
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read moreAstronomical doubts about 2012
The year 2012 is drama like a badly behaved celebrity. Frightful rumors and story are spreading. Already more than a half dozen books are advertising, to eager fans, astronomical fears on 2012 End Times..
Anyone who cruises the internet or all-night talk radio knows why. The olden Maya of Mexico and Guatemala kept a agenda that is about to roll up the red carpet of time, swing the solar organization into transcendental arrangement with the heart of the Milky Way, and turn Earth into a bowling pin for a rogue planet caption down our alley for a strike.
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read moreThe Sun and Energy
The sun energy source is not nuclear fusion but magnetic fields from the center of the Galaxy. The sun converts energy to mass and not mass to energy.
Abstract: The sun energy source thought to be a nuclear fusion reactor inside the sun core. The sun is not heated by fusion reaction but by magnetic fields coming from the galactic center. The nuclear fusion is a by product of the magnetic fields heating. The changing magnetic fields from the galactic center induce electric currents inside the sun that heat the sun. The heat and the high kinetic energy of particles in the sun core, trigger high energy collisions that create the main constituents of matter, electron, proton and neutron. The collisions also fuse or nucleosynthesis heavier elements like deuterium, tritium, helium and lithium. This leads to the fact that the stars and galaxies constantly produce mass and energy. The article will explain the clockworks behinds the galaxies energy production. The galaxy energy and mass production cancel out the Big Bang theory and leads to a steady state cosmological model with large amount of new mass created that expand and accelerate the universe.
Introduction
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read moreEarth travel
Earth has three motions. It spin like a top approximately an imaginary line called an axis that runs from the North Pole to the South Pole, it travels approximately the sun, and it moves through the Milky Way along with the sun and the take it easy of the solar system.
Earth takes 24 hours to spin completely around on its partnership so that the sun is in the same place in the sky. This stage is called a solar day. During a solar day, Earth moves a petite around its orbit so that it faces the stars a little another way each night. Thus, it only takes 23 hours 56 minutes 4.09 second for Earth to spin once so that the stars show to be in the same place in the sky. This phase is called a sidereal day. A sidereal day is shorter than an astrophysical day, so the stars appear to rise about 4 action earlier each day.
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read moreAstronomy: Pisces Constellation
Astronomy hasn’t always been a science, it was at one time more closely connected to astrology than it currently is. But over time theories were tested and recorded by men who wanted answers. These were men such as Ptolemy who imagined the solar system way back in 100AD, as well as Galileo who was the first to turn a telescope to the heavens. The universe is infinite, which means astronomy is infinite. Therefore it becomes necessary to specialize in one small part of astronomy. Let’s pick a constellation, Pisces, and discuss Pisces constellation astronomy.
As large as the universe is, isn’t a constellation too specialized a subject? The constellations aren’t just mythical beings imagined by ancient people. Constellations are made up of a large number of interstellar objects like stars and galaxies. Pisces is the home of one of the most interesting galaxies we can see. Galaxy NGC629, or M74, is a spiral galaxy like our own Milky Way, and we can see its facing side. We see all of it’s arms extending out from its center. To us it looks like a spiral someone might draw. Not with the naked eye, of course. It’s just a splotch as seen through most amateur telescopes. If the telescope is 12 inches or more aperture, suddenly its seen as a spiral.
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read moreGravity’s Fatal Attraction: Black Holes in the Universe

Richly illustrated with the images from observatories on the ground and in space, and computer simulations, this book shows how black holes were discovered, and discusses our current understanding of their role in cosmic evolution. This second edition covers new discoveries made in the past decade, including definitive proof of a black hole at the center of the Milky Way, evidence that the expansion of the Universe is accelerating, and the new appreciation of the connection between black holes and galaxy formation. There are entirely new chapters on gamma-ray bursts and cosmic feedback. Begelman and Rees blend theoretical arguments with observational results to demonstrate how both approaches contributed to this subject. Clear illustrations and photographs reveal the strange and amazing workings of our universe. The engaging style makes this book suitable for introductory undergraduate courses, amateur astronomers, and all readers interested in astronomy and physics.
