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246 points world2vec | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.655s | source
1. westurner ◴[] No.44362200[source]
Is it that there is not enough mass beyond the 30k-50k Kelvin wall at the edge of the solar system to attract away things with mass that can carry thermal energy; that thermal mass clumps in the well around the edges and only wisps away, or is that a sidewall boundary of a black hole?

Where is Planet X in relation to said wall of energy density?

Said wall is only sampled by the Voyager probes with a few exit trajectories?

Does said thermal wall extend all the way around the solar system, or is it mostly on one side of the sun; is it a directional coronal wake? Is there symmetry in said thermal wall around the trajectory of the sun?

Is this better explained with SQR Superfluid Quantum Relativity?

Are there other phases of matter at those temperatures?

From the article:

> "As the heliosphere plows through interstellar space, a bow shock forms, similar to what forms as a ship plowing through the ocean

So fluidic space wind and fluidic nonlinear bow shock wakes.

Are there additional heat walls beyond (and probably also before) the first, as there are with more laminar boat wakes?

Is there a gravitational wave "bow shock", too?

"The Heliosphere" https://www.nasa.gov/image-article/heliosphere-4/

From "Two galaxies aligned in a way where their gravity acts as a compound lens" https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42159195 :

> "The helical model - our solar system is a vortex" https://youtube.com/watch?v=0jHsq36_NTU

Where are planet X and the heat wall (and/or side wall) in this vortical model of the solar system?

replies(1): >>44389091 #
2. westurner ◴[] No.44389091[source]
Heliosphere > Heliopause: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heliosphere#Heliopause

The heliopause is due to a balance of pressure between the Ram pressure of the solar wind, and the Total pressure of the interstellar medium.

The "pressure" of such fluidic solar and interstellar "wind" is due to n-body gravity or the shape of spacetime.