A brown dwarf star is reportedly discovered, but they claim it is now at its 
closest approach to our Sun, a distant 11 astronomical units beyond Pluto. 
This conflicts with the landmark 1983 NASA report in the New York Times, 
stating that astronomers discovered perturbations in the orbit of Uranus 
in the early 1800s. This new article is telling us that this dwarf star, which 
they say is at perigee [and also at perihelion] is about to turn around and 
travel away from our Solar System. What gravitational force is now close 
enough to it to counteract the gravitational force of our Sun? None. 
With our Sun's great gravitational force field, deriving from its one-third of 
a million Earth-masses, this dwarf star must necessarily be accelerating  
toward our Sun, since leading astronomers noted in the 1983 New York Times 
article that this dwarf star was captured within our Sun's gravitational force 
field, and hence, it must now be closer and pulled ever more forcefully 
sunward.         John 
http://beforeitsnews.com/story/1995/064/Astronomers_Discover_Dwarf_Sun_Beyond_Pluto.html

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  • What is so frustrating about reading so much information about brown dwarf discovery is their location. Is it right to assume that PX is closer than that? If it is coming from the Southern Hemisphere, and most astronomers knows this, why not tell the truth once and for all. We are adults; we can take it.

  • interesting, but i still keep an open mind about the whole subject. Highly dangerous, just harking back to old data, old newspaper cuttings. what we need is real hard evidence in the present time, not a series of reports and coincidences in our observations. it could be real. conversely, it may not be. keep observing.

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