Planet X/Nibiru – The Destroyer of Planets

By BPEarthWatch – Watch below:

Jupiter the Destroyer

(http://the-earth-story.com/post/115049239112/jupiter-the-destroyer-we-should-be-thankful-that)

We should be thankful that the early solar system was not conducive for life. During those early days, Jupiter was less constrained by its current orbit and swung through the early solar system, annihilating a first generation of inner planets, as reported by new evidence in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

Based on a simulation of early planetary formation, the destructive behavior of an adolescent Jupiter may explain why our solar system has so little in common with other planetary systems. In these other systems, large rocky planets orbit extremely close to their host star — much closer than the distance between Mercury and the Sun. Jupiter’s wanderings is a possible reason to our solar system’s lack of inner rocky planets.

After the planetary apocalypse, Jupiter eventually settled into its current orbit, while the much of the debris of these first generation planets plunged into the Sun. The remnants that did not suffer a fiery fate would eventually coalesce into the modern inner planets of Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars — another reminder that we are nothing more than the recycled remains of our planetary progenitors.

-DC

Original PNAS paper: http://bit.ly/1CNpgOI

Further reading: