2. The Explanatory and Predictive Power of the Exploded Planet Hypothesis
a. Asteroids and Meteorites
However,
notwithstanding the problem of the enormous energy required for a
planet to blow up, plus the additional problem of a plausible
physical model by which such an event may be explained by natural
causes, the Exploded Planet Hypothesis does possess enormous explanatory and predictive
power, an explanatory and predictive power that far exceeds those
of the favored theories within contemporary astronomy.
For example, the
hypothesis is more than an adequate explanation not only for the
occurrence of meteorites, but for some of their more unusual
features:
Some of them show evidence of rapid melting a long time ago, as if they were affected by an immense heat blast. A few show evidence of shock, others are badly charred. Some meteorites display evidence that they formed in a high-temperature or high-pressure environment, as in the interior of a large planet; for example, tiny diamonds have occasionally been reported in meteorites. And there is specific evidence of exposure to an event of enormous energy, which conventional theory supposes to have been a nearby supernova.14
Moreover, those
bodies without an atmosphere in the “outer solar system are coated
with an extremely dark material. This may be the carbonaceous
residue from the blast.”15Additionally, some of
the moons of Neptune lie within the Roche limit “where tidal stresses would tear apart a forming
body.” Remember this point about tidal stresses, for it will
become crucially important in a moment. This means simply that
these “moonlets” simply could not have been formed near their
current orbits, but were the result of capture, and the “exploded
planet hypothesis provides a natural origin” for this
phenomenon.16
And as for the
presence of diamonds in some meteorites, this is not the only
unusual feature of meteorites that the hypothesis helps to explain.
Their presence in fact led some astronomers to propose novel and
heretofore unknown mechanisms for their formation from “space
collisions” or “during atmospheric entry or by Earth-impact shock”
without the need for the sudden shock and high-pressure high-heat
environment of a planetary explosion. But there exists one
unshocked meteorite, named Abee, where none of these suggestions
“can be operative.” Moreover, there are diamonds found at the K/T
geological boundary on earth (ca. 65,000,000 years ago) that “are
confirmed to be of extraterrestrial origin” and which therefore
cannot be generated by earth impact.17
Yet another unusual
feature is explained by the hypothesis. Van Flandern puts it this
way:
Asteroids exhibit “explosion signatures” in the distribution of their orbital elements. These relationships between the orbital elements “a” (semi-major axis), “e” (eccentricity), and “I” (inclination) were first found among fragments from artificial satellites of the Earth which exploded in orbit, and then were found to hold for the asteroid belt as well.18
The theory explains
why some of these asteroids, which appear to have their own even
smaller satellites, even have such
satellites at all, for “tidal forces and collisions should have
eliminated most minor planet satellites in far less than the age of
the solar system, but not in a time as short as a few million
years.”19In other words, the
event that led to the formation of the asteroid belt, in which one
finds asteroids with their own tiny satellites, must have occurred
in a relatively “recent” time as far as astronomical times go, in
the last few million years. As we shall soon discover, the timing
of this event will assume enormous importance both for the
development of the Exploded Planet, and for the Cosmic War,
Hypothesis.
b. Comets
While the Exploded
Planet Hypothesis was first formulated by Olbers to explain the
existence of asteroids, Lagrange soon found an even more
interesting aspect of its explanatory power: it adequately
accounted not only for the existence of the elongated orbits of
comets and their large orbital periods, but it accounted adequately
for their origin. It also accounted for another odd feature of
comets, or rather, for an odd feature that has never been observed
about comets. If one assumes, as contemporary astronomical theory
does, that most comets originate from a point beyond the planetary
solar system, that is, from a point beyond Pluto, then one should
expect that there is a class of comet, on hyperbolic orbits, that
will take them into the solar system once, then back out of it,
once, never to return. But no such orbits have ever been observed
for comets.20
This raises the issue
of the current standard theory for the origin of comets, the
so-called “Oort cloud” and its corollaries. The Oort cloud is
contemporary astronomy’s accepted standard model for the origin of
comets. This “cloud” is thought to be a region of “space debris”
far beyond the orbit of Pluto, at the very fringes of the solar
system. At such distances, the debris is thought to be able to
react to the gravitation of passing stars, which then more or less
“kick” it into the wild orbits we observe as comets. But this
theory should mean that some comets are “kicked” into the
hyperbolic orbits already described, and these should “arrive at
the rate of at least a few per century if comets have been
interacting with passing stars for billions of years.”21 But comets, as we
know, return. They may be recurrent
pests, visiting every few decades or so, or the occasional visitor
stopping by once every few hundreds, thousands, or even millions of
years. But the point is, they return,
and if they return, then there is a regularity and pattern to their
orbits that is difficult for the Oort Cloud model to predict. It is
here that the scientific priesthood stepped in with a quick patch
to fix the leaky structure:
To minimize these difficulties it is now imagined that the Oort cloud comets come form a hypothetical “inner core” between the planetary region22 and the Oort cloud. There is no observational evidence for such a region - it is simply a theoretical construct. Then the inner core is fed by a hypothesized “Kuiper belt” of comets of nearly circular orbits near the plane of the other planets, beginning just outside the orbit of Neptune, which is supposed to have been left over from the primeval solar nebula. Again, there is no observational evidence for this region either, despite many intensive searches...23
Thus, Van Flandern
proposed a revival and revision of the Exploded Planet Hypothesis
in 1978, since the origin of comets in the explosion of a planet
would explain the observed characteristics of their orbits “in an a
priori way.” Moreover, the new theory proposed that the exploded
planet, which was the origin of comets, existed in a parent body
“in or near the present location of the asteroid belt” and that
this event had necessarily occurred “in the relatively recent
past.”24
Such a theory makes
far more sense than an imaginary theoretical construct like the
Oort Cloud, with its recent “fix”, the Kuiper Belt, for yet another
simple reason. In order for the Oort cloud theory to work, the
“debris cloud” which comprises it has “to be immense in order to
provide the few comets we observe, because the chances are so small
of any one comet being perturbed into observable range.”25
In summary, the hypothesis that comets originated in a breakup event only a few million years ago in the inner solar system makes a number of very specific predictions: that there will exist a category of first return (“new”) comets; that these will have huge aphelion distances with intrinsically very little scatter; that they will come from preferred directions on the celestial sphere with a specific percentage bias; that the number of orbits will diminish as one looks closer to the Sun; that the distances and directions of approach will be correlated; and several other characteristics.26Thus,The exploded planet theory is the only dynamically viable alternative to the Oort cloud. The latter requires the existence of an implausible cloud of more than a trillion comets orbiting the Sun at distances 1000 times that of Pluto, so remote that passing stars would frequently pass through it.27The failure of this standard Oort cloud theory to detect any source for a re-supply of the Oort cloud “from a hypothetical inner ‘Kuiper Belt’ means that Oort cloud comets should have long since been depleted by passing stars, galactic tides, and passage of the Sun....unless comets originated quite recently.”28
c. Other Phenomena Explained by the Exploding Planet Hypothesis
Other strange solar
system phenomena are explained by the hypothesis, not the least of
which is the strange hemispheric discrepancy observed on the
Earth’s satellite, the Moon, and its even stranger regions of
anomalous “denser mass,” the well-known “mascons,” for
The Moon’s hemispheric asymmetry could have been caused by the blast. It would then be no coincidence that the hemisphere with all the dark “seas” faces the Earth, since the extra mass accreted by the Moon (which shows up as “mascons” — mass concentrations under the lunar “seas”, which are actually lava flows) would have caused the Moon to change its orientation until its “heavy side” faced “down”.29
Yet another odd
feature explained by the hypothesis is that the orbit of Mars’ moon
Phobos will decay into Mars’ atmosphere “in about 30-40 million
years,” a fact which is explainable if Phobos originated about
“3,200,000 years ago.”30 Note now that one
has the first indicator of a more or less exact time that the
explosion of the missing planet occurred. This will become quite
the crucial point as we proceed.
A loose corroboration
of this timing is provided by the fact that the ratio of hydrogen
to deuterium on Mars indicates that the Red Planet’s “formerly
abundant flowing water has been lost in just the last 105 to 107
years,”31 that is, Mars lost
its water between 100,000 and 10,000,000 years ago. This would mean
that during the 3,200,000 years event, Mars may still have been a
water-bearing planet. Yet another loose corroboration of the
3,200,000 years benchmark is provided by Jupiter and its massive
gravity itself. While Jupiter’s mass “is insufficient to have
interfered with the formation of a normal planet” in the asteroid
belt, it is sufficient to have “swept up almost all the mass from
the exploded planet that did not escape the solar system.” Even its
excess heat “may be an indication of relatively recent mass
accretion by the planet.”32
d. The Timing of the Event: 3,200,000 Years Ago
In its original
version, Van Flandern was led by the preponderance of the evidence,
especially the mathematical, statistical evidence based on cometary
orbits, to suggest that the explosion of the missing planet
occurred some 3,200,000 years ago. He describes what then occurred
in very suggestive terms:
Let us go back in time three million years. On Earth, the dinosaurs became extinct much earlier, land animals gave rise to the primates, and the earliest ancestors of man have just appeared on the scene. Elsewhere in the solar system everything is as we know it in the twentieth century, with one major exception. There is one additional planet between Mars and Jupiter, larger than any of the others except Jupiter itself. From Earth the extra planet is bright enough to be seen in the daytime, and dominates the night sky with its brilliance.Suddenly, it explodes! Like a nova in our own solar system, it brightens until it outshines the Sun itself. Solid, liquid, and gaseous debris is hurled into space at high velocities in all directions. Nonetheless, it takes months for the leading edge of the blast to reach the Earth. What a sight it would have been for early man to see! The sky ablaze with meteors night and day unceasingly for months.33
Such an event, and
its effect on the Earth and any observers on it, would clearly have
been very dramatic, as Van Flandern suggests. More importantly, it
would have had an inevitable effect on the Earth’s geology and
climate. Indeed, it is precisely around the same time frame,
approximately 3,000,000 years ago, that the equatorial-like
climatic conditions which are believed to have prevailed on the
Earth up until that time, suddenly changed to “a succession of ice
ages over the past 3,000,000 years or so.”34 While the
mechanism for such a sudden change is not known in conventional
theories, a “massive influx of water vapor from the planetary
explosion may have been responsible.”35 Indeed, to the
influx of water vapor one would also have to add an influx of
“debris” and “dust” that would have had atmospheric and
climate-altering potential.
So what do we know
about the missing planet? “Ovenden’s dynamical calculations
indicate that a massive planet, perhaps Saturn-sized, is missing
from the gap between Mars and Jupiter, where the main belt of
asteroids is found.”36 Since comets and
asteroids also appear to be about 20% water,37 we can now
draw some conclusions:
1. The planet was large, approximately the same mass as Saturn.
2. The planet was solid, for diamond bearing carbonaceous asteroids appear as the debris of its explosion.
3. The planet was very likely a water-bearing planet, since Mars, exhibits definite and distinct evidence of sudden, massive flooding across its entire southern hemisphere.
We may now speculate
a bit further. If this planet was home to intelligent human-like
life, it would seem to be likely that such life would have been of
much larger size, with more massive skeletal structure and
musculature to accommodate the higher gravity. In short, such
creatures would be, by modern human standards, giants. Thus, the
existence of any remains of such creatures might be explainable as
having an ultimate origin on such a world, and would therefore
constitute corroborative evidence — of a very loose sort, to be
sure - of the existence of such a planet.
For the moment,
however, let us return to Van Flandern’s hypothesis, and note its
problems, problems he himself ran into as he elaborated the
theory.