Re: Closed orbits/WAS Hi Nancy :-))
In Article <Pine.LNX.4.10.10105090208200.955-100000@localhost.localdomain> Axel Harvey wrote:
> On Tue, 8 May 2001, Paul Lutus wrote:
>> 3. All orbits for which n > 2 are innately unstable, chaotic, and are not
>> soluble in closed form as the n = 2 case is.
Unstable, yes.  The Zetas described the point when Planet X has both its
foci behind it as an unstable point, when it would be subject to "the
call of the wild".
    Having passed by the Sun, [Planet X] now slows. The rate
    of slowing is dependent on two factors, essentially - its speed
    and the fact that both its gravitational masters are now behind it.
    As fast as [Planet X] picked up speed approaching your Sun, it
    slows even faster, the nearness of your Sun behind it no small
    factor in this. Nevertheless, for a traveling planet the size of
    [Planet X], putting on the brakes and turning about is no small
    matter. It must first come to a stop, which it does in
    approximately 2 years 3 months after passing your Sun.
    [Planet X]'s orbit takes it well away from the Sun after passage,
    so that it moves out a distance equal to 1/4 of the distance
    between the Sun and its other foci before it slows to a stop.
    After passing through the Solar System, [Planet X] moves out
    on the opposite side some 3.560 times the distance from your
    Sun to its farthest planet, Pluto, then stops. It then hovers, not
    moving, essentially, for 3 years 6 months, and then slowly
    begins a return trip which telescopes or mirrors the voyage out.
        ZetaTalk in [Planet X] Orbit
            (http://www.zetatalk.com/science/s29.htm)
    [Planet X] hovers for the length of time it does before
    returning because of what we will term the call of the wild.
    Having stopped in its tracks [Planet X] is in a vulnerable position,
    and in point of fact could become caught in a new pattern of
    motion should the objects around it present a new dynamic. It
    has stopped, dead still, and thus is in a virginal position of
    having no commitments. During most passages of [Planet X]
    there is no contest, but in some cases there are other
    attractions nearby that create confusion. The upshot of this is
    that [Planet X] may delay longer before setting out on its
    return passage, but the factors in your part of the Universe are
    not such as to change the outcome.
        ZetaTalk in Second Pass
             (http://www.zetatalk.com/science/s35.htm)