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How old is planet Earth? Is it 4.5 billion years old or 6,000 years old?

08.06.2025 09:33

How old is planet Earth? Is it 4.5 billion years old or 6,000 years old?

Have fun.

So looking at the size sequencing, they may have been the 28.354 group that collided.

At N = 14, the base number is around 1.003 2XX xxx, and by the time you get up to the Sun radius where N = 31, the base number is 1.003 486 xxx. I did all the calculations, for weeks, and NASA changed the Radius of the Sun. Grumble, grumble, grumble.

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You can solve for the base number by using a 10 digit calculator and using natural logs, and the Y^x keys.

This would make more sense. Asteroid Pair ( 28.354 ), Jupiter and Saturn ( 27.354 ), Uranus and Neptune ( 26.354 ), Missing Pair ( 25.354 ), Earth and Venus ( 24.354 ) Mars, Mercury, and 3 moons of Jupiter, and Saturn ( 23.354 ), Luna and 3 or 4 others Moons ( 22.354 ). I have taken this down to 14.354, and every group has a size range with gaps in sizes between every N .

Take the base number, and raise it to the age in millions of years to get the radius in meters of any orb.

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The Sun is 31.354 x 186.598 million years old. You do the math to get the age.

The XXX xxx grow larger as time passes as there is a feed back loop where the surface gravity of a planet, and its frontal area increases with time so it gradually grows larger as time passes.

The radius is calculate-able by taking a base number that always starts 1.003 XXX xxx.

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Almost all of the Planets are N.354 X 186.598 million years old. However, all but one of the Planets are too big as they got an extra supply of materials from the collision of two planets in the orbit of the Asteroid belt. I thought that these two planets were the 25.354 X 186.598 million year old group, but since the collision occurred around 4,000 million years ago, the 25.354 million year old pair would have been too small to supply all the materials that allowed seven of the eight planets to get way too big.

You will understand the concepts better if you do all the calculations and group around 90 of the 200 plus round orbs into their groups. The smaller groups tend to center more on their average group sizes. The big dogs are too bigs. The too bigest is Jupiter at 155 + % of the calculated number, Saturn is around 129 %, Two are at 111%, two at 107 %, one at 101 %, and Mercury is a t 80 %.