Are Sedna and Nibiru both orbiting our dark star companion, and is ours a double solar system?
(Pictures have been reproduced or modified from Andy Lloyd’s web page.)
Andy Lloyd, author of “The Dark Star”, presents a fascinating new theory about our Sun’s binary or companion and the famed Niburu, based on the work of Zechariah Sitchin’s “The Twelfth Planet”. Lloyd believes that there is a failed star or sun circling our own with a cometary orbit beginning just outside the Kuiper Belt at 60 to 70 AU and stretching all the way out to the Inner Oort Cloud. Its orbital period is at least three sars or 10,800 years which is very close to what astronomers have given to Sedna’s orbit. It orbits more or less on the same plane as the Sun and in the same direction as our solar system planets.
Nibiru’s Size, The Home World, and the Dark Star or Binary in the Background
What is really unique about his theory is that this dark star has its own planets, the first five minor, the sixth an Earth-sized Homeworld, and the seventh the planet or object we call Nibiru. The Homeworld is much like Earth and is where our Annunaki “gods” live. Nibiru is largely uninhabitable and acts more as a ship or battle station. When the dark star is at perihelion(closest approach to our sun) at 60 to 70 AU, Nibiru’s orbit, which is at 60 AU from its parent, has a wide enough orbit to cut through our solar system, usually in the vicinity of Jupiter’s orbit, although this can vary. Nibiru’s orbital inclination is some 30 degrees to our solar plane or ecliptic.
Dark Star Approaches(red) with giant Nibiru, its 7th Planet
As Nibiru cuts through our solar system in retrograde motion to the other planets it performs its various duties such as displacing or replacing planets and causing general havoc in the process. Its passage is momentous but short taking only a few weeks or months at most, after which it dissapears from view. It is fiery red in color with a debris-filled tail, and circling it are a number of moons which it sometimes uses as weapons to pound other planets. Nibiru or its moons were responsible for such feats as the destruction of Maldek and other planets which are now asteroid belts; the craters or surface scars on the Moon or planets of our solar system, as well as their varying axial tilts and orbits; the sinking of Atlantis and Noah’s Flood; and God knows what else. It is the physical link or “ferry” between our solar system and the dark star system.
Nibiru’s Orbit(red) Cutting Through Our Solar System
Close up of Nibiru Cutting Through Our Solar System
Nibiru, the Winged(or Horned) Disc
Many believe that since Nibiru causes so much fear, chaos, and destruction, that it is a reptillian or satanic instrument of war. In fact, the Dark Star and its entire system of planets may be a counterfiet system to our own, and domininantly alien or reptilian. Is this the domain of Lucifer and his fallen angels -the “outer darkness” of which the Bible speaks of, with tiny Pluto acting as Guardian of the Gates to Hell?
Do we have a miniature version of Nibiru and the Dark Star within our very own planet? If our hollow earth can be likened to to a cosmos or solar system and its inner central sun to a star around which other objects (representing planets) revolve, then we have a similar model, only on a much smaller scale. See the Earth’s Inner Sun on this site.
Astronomer Alessandro Morbidelli at the Cote D’Azur Observatory postulates that our Dark Star may have an orbital period of as much as six sars or 21,600 years. He bases this on the Babylonian Great Year period of six sars mentioned by Roman chronologist Censorinus in the third century AD. This is close to the 25,920 year period that astronomer Pickering gave to his planet Q back in 1909. After every such period or revolution the Earth’s poles become equatorial causing great catastrophes.
Like Andy Lloyd, Morbidelli believes our Dark Star is presently past its perihelion(farthest distance from the Sun) and on its way back, but it has a long way to go. He too believes it is now located somewhere in the star-rich fields of Sagittarius where it is not so easy to observe.
source:
http://www.librarising.com/space/darkstar.html