Quote from: SiL on Dec 02, 2011, 05:17:55 AM
Sure they would've.
So what is your game here, are you a hater of AvP-R and the fans of AvP-R? You can't honestly tell me that they were heading too earth on the trajectory they were on with a straight face. I can not tell if you are being sarcastic and lighthearted or you are being hostile.
Quote from: SiL on Dec 02, 2011, 05:17:55 AM
Got anything to back that up? At all? Because I can't find anything about a planet having been discovered closer to the sun than Mercury.
Sorry saw it on the news.
Quote from: SiL on Dec 02, 2011, 05:17:55 AM
Ceres was last listed as a planet several hundred years ago, and none of those fit the current definition of a planet (although strictly speaking, neither does anything else in the solar system). Any new definition of a planet isn't going to include them; at any rate, adding them would add Pluto and Charon back.
Well on the news they were talking about people in the scientific community changing what counts as a planet and how many or in our Solar system. Those Dwarf Planets may count as reg planets very very soon.
Quote from: DoomRulz on Dec 02, 2011, 12:33:53 AM
way to fill in the gap in KingAngel's argument.
Well I do not know about you but the only time it was bright in AvP-R was when we saw Wolf on his planet, and it also was the only seen saw freaking bright I had to turn the brightness down just prevent my tv from being damaged.
One thing you have to realize is that Science is not ever 100% correct, we always have correction to make to what we thought was correct in the past. Even if we think we have correct past mistakes in the future people will correct mistakes we made now.