Let’s Blame it on Someone
I have gone back and researched double rainbows and there is no mention of a thermodynamic effect in the research of a double rainbow, they are just optical and “meteorological” phenomena, whatever that means. They just happen to show up at times of LARGE thermodynamic upsets in the atmosphere, like right after Hurricane Sandy in New Jersey, the Joplin, MO tornado as well as the Virgina Derecho. I have already showed photos where they exist DURING the thermodynamic upset. I saw one just a couple of months ago sweeping through Atlanta along with a thunderstorm. I believe, if my research and theory is correct, the particle arcing through the double rainbow is the basis for the meteorological “phenomenon”. It is collapsing gasses and condensing water vapor as well as absorbing and bending light and charging the atmosphere. If the world had realized this 2,350 years ago I believe we would be much further ahead in our science, with a lot less “phenomena” to wonder about.
Of course I can easily be proven wrong so I welcome the criticism. If I happen to be right, then the core of the Earth will need to be entropic dark matter nuclei also because that is where those particles are gravitationally coalescing to. Which answers the questions about how our magnetic fields originate.
From Wilkepedia: The classical Greek scholar Aristotle (384–322 BC) was first to devote serious attention to the rainbow. According to Raymond L. Lee and Alistair B. Fraser, “Despite its many flaws and its appeal to Pythagorean numerology, Aristotle’s qualitative explanation showed an inventiveness and relative consistency that was unmatched for centuries. After Aristotle’s death, much rainbow theory consisted of reaction to his work, although not all of this was uncritical.”[25]
So we humans are very good at blaming people. When a sinkhole opens up we blame the city, we blame the contractor, we blame the engineer, we blame the Earth, we blame water, we blame the mining companies. We hire the lawyers, we sue somebody and the world goes on. So let’s go ahead and blame Aristotle for this one. For, although he noticed that they showed up many times during/after storms, he mixed up the cause and effect because he just did not know that 95% of the energy in the universe was hidden behind the walls of those “particles” and just enough is passed on to our world to give us the energy we need to live for me to talk about it to you right here, right at this very moment.
Godspeed.
References
Copyright 2012 Stewart D. Simonson All Rights Reserved
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