Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Misc

Assumptions about stars and redshift lead to bizarre dark energy theory.

Scientists think they discovered water on Ceres, but...
"Interestingly, of the four occasions that Herschel studied Ceres, one of those times the signature of water was not detected. This suggests that there may be some seasonal effect influencing the plume’s presence. Astronomers think that as Ceres reaches the closest part in its orbit to the sun, the more intense sunlight causes its icy surface to sublimate (i.e. turn straight from ice to vapor without transitioning through a liquid phase) at a rate of around 6 kilograms (13 pounds) per second. As the dwarf planet drifts further away, little vapor is generated due to a reduction in solar energy."
It's more likely they discovered the same electrical sputtering that occurs on comets and moons that they don't acknowledge exists.
"Herschel also noticed a short term variation in the water plume signal. As Ceres rotates, the water signal rotates with it, suggesting there are discrete regions on the world’s surface generating the plumes. In fact, the astronomers have been able to link the water plumes with two darker regions on the surface that were first observed by Hubble. The regions, which are 5 percent darker than the Ceres average, could be absorbing more sunlight, causing the ice to heat up faster and generating the water vapor plumes more readily."
More likely they've been darkened by electric discharges like on comets and moons.
"This discovery has a far-reaching impact. For starters, scientists are finding that the definition of a comet and an asteroid is becoming more and more blurred with the discoveries of “hybrid” objects that possess qualities of both. Perhaps Ceres, a huge asteroid, also has an aptitude for presenting comet-like features."
Establishment scientists are slowly learning what Wal Thornhill has been saying for quite some time.

Students accidentally discover relatively nearby and recent supernova.
"What’s funny about this is that the galaxy M82 is undergoing a huge burst of star formation right now, and that means lots of massive stars are born."
That means there's a lot of electricity flowing through the galaxy, and that apparently made a double-layer explode.
"Given the fact that it’s nearby, up high for so many observers, and caught so early, this may become one of the best-observed supernovae in modern times."
Hopefully this will help the establishment transition to the Electric Universe theory faster.

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