When a Wind is a Wind is a Gravity Field
March 10, 2013 – SPACE – The solar wind is a hot and fast flow of magnetized gas that streams away from the sun’s upper atmosphere. It is made of hydrogen and helium ions with a sprinkling of heavier elements. Researchers liken it to the steam from a pot of water boiling on a stove; the sun is literally boiling itself away. “But,” says Adam Szabo of the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, “solar wind does something that steam in your kitchen never does. As steam rises from a pot, it slows and cools. As solar wind leaves the sun, it accelerates, tripling in speed as it passes through the corona. Furthermore, something inside the solar wind continues to add heat even as it blows into the cold of space.” Finding that “something” has been a goal of researchers for decades. In the 1970s and 80s, observations by two German/US Helios spacecraft set the stage for early theories, which usually included some mixture of plasma instabilities, magnetohydrodynamic waves, and turbulent heating. Narrowing down the possibilities was a challenge. The answer, it turns out, has been hiding in a dataset from one of NASA’s oldest active spacecraft, a solar probe named Wind. “I think we found it,” he says. “The source of the heating in the solar wind is ion cyclotron waves.” Ion cyclotron waves are made of protons that circle in wavelike-rhythms around the sun’s magnetic field. According to a theory developed by Phil Isenberg (University of New Hampshire) and expanded by Vitaly Galinsky and Valentin Shevchenko (UC San Diego), ion cyclotron waves emanate from the sun; coursing through the solar wind, they heat the gas to millions of degrees and accelerate its flow to millions of miles per hour. Kasper’s findings confirm that ion cyclotron waves are indeed active, at least in the vicinity of Earth where the Wind probe operates. Ion cyclotron waves can do much more than heat and accelerate the solar wind, notes Kasper. “They also account for some of the wind’s very strange properties.”
I say much of that solar wind is comprised of massive entropic quantum micro black hole particles. They are in fact much of the gravitational mass supporting my theory of quantum gravity. They condense and cool the local hydrogen atmosphere of the sun and become more energetic as they do so, accelerating as they trigger fusion at their surface. As they enter the vacuum of space, they now appear hot, as they have no more gasses to condense and cool in their surroundings and their surface is millions of degrees Kelvin. At least until they reach Earth, where, if they are not deflected by Earth’s orbital entropic magnetosphere, they enter Earth’s atmosphere, they accelerate again and we call them shooting stars and they begin cooling and condensing gasses in our world and the wind begins again, only this time, depending upon their momentum, they can orbit and create effects we are much more familiar with that we have given names we call jet streams, tornadoes, hurricanes, derichos, rainbows, lightning, etc. In other words, the solar wind is also a gravity field and just more filaments of dark matter spiraling through the universe that connects us.
Godspeed
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References
Copyright 2012 Stewart D. Simonson All Rights Reserved


