..On Dec. 21, 2012, many doomsday believers fear the apocalypse — anything
from
a rogue planet smashing into us to our world spinning end over end.
However, the
world should expect nothing more next year than the winter
solstice, the longest
night of the year, NASA says.
Many people point
to the end of the Mayan Long Count calendar on Dec. 21, 2012
as evidence of
the coming apocalypse, but astronomers have been quick to stress
that there
is nothing to be concerned about.
According to the ancient Mayan
calendar, next year's winter solstice marks the
end of a 144,000-day cycle.
This cycle, which begins at the mythical Maya
creation date, has already been
repeated 12 times. The 13th will end in 2012,
capping a full 5,200-year Mayan
cycle of creation.
This date has long been shrouded in mystery, with many
claiming that it will
bring destruction to our planet. [End of the World? Top
Doomsday Fears]
Rogue planet Nibiru?
One fear is that a rogue
planet that has been dubbed "Nibiru" or "Planet X" is
supposedly aimed at
Earth. Self-proclaimed Nibiru expert Nancy Lieder, who says
she is in contact
with the aliens from Zeta Reticuli, first said Nibiru would
cause widespread
disaster in May 2003, only to change it to Dec. 21, 2012.
There is,
however, no evidence that Nibiru is real.
"Nibiru is ridiculous because
it doesn't exist — it never existed as anything
other than a figment of the
imagination by pseudo-scientists who don't seem
bothered by a complete lack
of evidence," astronomer Don Yeomans, manager of
NASA's Near-Earth Object
program office at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in
Pasadena, Calif., told
SPACE.com.
There is no basis for the claim that it might be lurking
behind the sun, as it
could not have hidden from observation until now,
Yeomans said. If such a planet
was headed toward Earth by Dec. 21, 2012, it
would already be visible to the
naked eye.
Cosmic
alignments?
There are also concerns that planets or stars might line up
in ways that will
transform Earth. For instance, some theorists claim that
from our point of view,
the sun will cross in front of the plane of our
galaxy on Dec. 21. However, the
sun already does this twice a year, Yeomans
said.
In fact, the sun will eventually cross the plane of our galaxy.
However, the sun
is about 67 light-years from the galactic plane, so it
should take several
million years to do so, Yeomans said. Even then, when our
solar system finally
does cross the plane, nothing special will occur, he
added. [10 Failed Doomsday
Predictions]
Some also claim that
gravitational effects from planets lining up with each
other will somehow
affect Earth. However, there is no planetary alignment due on
Dec. 21, 2012,
"and if there were, it wouldn't cause any problems," Yeomans
said.
The
only bodies that have any significant gravitational impact on Earth are
the
moon and the sun, effects we see as the tides. Tidal effects from other
bodies
in our solar system are negligible at best, and in any case, we have
experienced
them for millions of years without notice.
Solar
storms?
Solar storms — deluges of energetic particles from the sun — do
happen, usually
waxing and waning in cycles that last roughly 11 years. When
these charged
particles collide with Earth, they can trigger auroras and
damage satellites and
power lines, although not really inflicting any lasting
harm, Yeomans said.
There are accounts of a solar "super-storm" slamming
into Earth in 1859.
Although that caused relatively little damage back then,
there are concerns that
such a storm might cause far more harm now that our
world is more dependent on
electronics.
Yet, there is no evidence that
such a super-storm will happen on Dec. 21 of next
year, Yeomans
said.
Flip-flopping Earth?
There is some alarm that 2012 could see
the flipping of Earth's poles — either
the planet's geographical poles, which
mark the Earth's axis of rotation, or its
magnetic poles, which our compasses
point toward.
But, there is no reason to fear such an occurrence,
scientists said, because the
moon stabilizes our planet's spin. The planet's
magnetic poles do flip, but over
periods of about 500,000 years, and not
suddenly, "but over thousands of years,"
with no evidence of a flip on Dec.
21, 2012, Yeomans said.
Even if the planet's magnetic poles do flip, no
real problems would occur, other
than the inconvenience of us having to
change our compasses from north to south,
he added.
Cosmic
impacts?
The Earth is always vulnerable to impacts by comets and
asteroids, but giant
impacts are rare, with the last major collision taking
place 65 million years
ago, ending the Age of Dinosaurs.
Still,
astronomers do monitor the sky for near-Earth objects.
"There are no
known near-Earth objects in 2012 that present a credible risk to
Earth,"
Yeomans said. "None, zero, zip, nada."
But despite evidence to the
contrary, doomsdays theorists have garnered
attention, and similar prophecies
will continue to proliferate unless scientists
become more involved in
bringing truth to these outlandish claims, Yeomans said.
Mounting
hysteria regarding these unfounded doomsday predictions "will improve
only if
scientists get more engaged in debunking pseudoscience," he said.
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