Terrifying scientific discovery: Strange radiation emissions from the sun are suddenly mutating matter on Earth
4 views
Skip to first unread message
Pastor Dale Morgan
unread,
Jun 2, 2011, 8:03:46 PM6/2/11
Reply to author
Sign in to reply to author
Forward
Sign in to forward
Delete
You do not have permission to delete messages in this group
Copy link
Report message
Show original message
Either email addresses are anonymous for this group or you need the view member email addresses permission to view the original message
to Bible-Pro...@googlegroups.com
Signs
In The Sun, The Moon and The Stars
Terrifying scientific discovery: Strange radiation emissions
from the sun are suddenly mutating matter on Earth
Sunday, May 01, 2011
TERRENCE AYM
Project World Awareness
For months mounting fear has driven researchers to wring their
hands over the approaching solar storms. Some have predicted
devastating solar tsunamis that could wipe away our advanced
technology, others voiced dire warnings that violent explosions on
the surface of the sun could reach out to Earth, breach our
magnetic field, and expose billions to high intensity X-rays and
other deadly forms of cancer-causing radiation.
Now evidence has surfaced that something potentially more
dangerous is happening deep within the hidden core of our
life-giving star: never-before-seen particles or some mysterious
force is being shot out from the sun and it’s hitting Earth.
Whatever it is, the evidence suggests it’s affecting all matter.
Strange and unknown
Alarmed physicists first became aware of this threat over the past
several years. Initially dismissed as an anomaly, now frantic
scientists are shooting e-mails back and forth to colleagues
across the world attempting to grasp exactly what is happening to
the sun.
Something impossible has happened. Yet the “impossible” has been
proven to be true. Laboratories around the globe have confirmed
that the rate of radioactive decay—once thought to be a constant
and a bedrock of science—is no longer a constant. Something being
emitted from the sun is interacting with matter in strange and
unknown ways with the startling potential to dramatically change
the nature of the very Earth itself.
Exactly what has scientists so on edge is the fact that the
natural rate of decay of atomic particles has always been
predictable. Indeed, using the decay rate of Carbon-14 has been a
method to date archeological artifacts. The process, known as
carbon dating, measures the quantity of Carbon-14 within organic
objects. According to the numbers, Carbon-14 has a specific
half-life of 5,730 years.
Physicists have proven through exhaustive observation and
experimentation over the course of a century that it takes 5,730
years for Carbon-14 atoms to decay into a stable Nitrogen-14.
The values don’t change—or at least they never have in the past.
With certain evidence that radioactive decay can be significantly
affected by an unknown effect from the sun, much of science is
turned on its head.
Rate of decay speeding up
Worst of all, if the decay rates of matter are being mutated then
all matter on Earth is being affected including the matter that
makes up life.
The mutation may go so far as to change the underlying reality of
the quantum universe—and by extrapolation-the nature of life, the
principles of physics, perhaps even the uniform flow of time.
In fact, some evidence of time dilation has been gleaned from
close observation of the decay rate. If particles interacting with
the matter are not the cause—and matter is being affected by a new
force of nature-then time itself may be speeding up and there’s no
way to stop it.
Neutrinos the cause?
Researchers have correlated the anomalies in the decay rate to a
33-day period. That time frame matches the 33-day rotation of the
solar core. Such a match strains credulity as being a mere
coincidence.
Since the sun’s core is known to blast out continuous streams of
particles called neutrinos, some scientists are attempting to find
evidence that neutrinos are the culprits behind the mutation of
matter.
There’s a problem with that hypothesis, however, as neutrinos are
like ghost particles. They’re extremely difficult to detect.
Normally, neutrinos pass through the Earth without any interaction
at all. To a neutrino, it’s as if the Earth doesn’t exist.
Other than discovering a previously unknown property of neutrinos,
or finding a new particle altogether, the possibility exists that
no particle is behind the changes recorded in the radioactive
decay rates. What could be causing the phenomenon is a previously
unknown force.
Unknown dangers
As the sun builds towards solar maximum and a period of dangerous
intensity never experienced by any living person inexorably
approaches, strange, uncontrollable forces could be building deep
within its fiery nuclear furnace.
It’s already been proven that the sun’s mass warps time, bends
light waves and accounts for mutation of species on Earth. Now
this new force may be directly interacting with matter in a way
that could not only change Mankind’s understanding of physics, but
change Mankind itself…and not necessarily in a beneficial way.
Yes, the e-mails will continue to fly and the hands will continue
to wring. But in the end, we are all just observers.
Whether the phenomenon has no real impact on humanity, or the
worst impact imaginable, nothing can be done to stop it. Once
again, the titanic forces of nature rear up to overwhelm our
technology—and we find ourselves like the playthings of gods.
Utterly helpless.
Sources
Is the Sun Emitting a Mystery Particle, Ian O’Neill, Discovery
News
The Sun Influences the Decay of Radioactive Elements,Tudor Vieru,
Softpedia
Mysteriously, Solar Activity Found to Influence Behavior of
Radioactive Materials On Earth, Rebecca Boyle, POSCI
As_I_Please writes“Scientists at the US National Institute of
Standards and Technology and Purdue University have ruled out
neutrino flux as a cause of previously observed fluctuations in
nuclear decay rates. From the article: ‘Researchers … tested this
by comparing radioactive gold-198 in two shapes, spheres and thin
foils, with the same mass and activity. Gold-198 releases
neutrinos as it decays. The team reasoned that if neutrinos are
affecting the decay rate, the atoms in the spheres should decay
more slowly than the atoms in the foil because the neutrinos
emitted by the atoms in the spheres would have a greater chance of
interacting with their neighboring atoms. The maximum neutrino
flux in the sample in their experiments was several times greater
than the flux of neutrinos from the sun. The researchers followed
the gamma-ray emission rate of each source for several weeks and
found no difference between the decay rate of the spheres and the
corresponding foils.’ The paper can be found here on arXiv.
Slashdot has previously covered the original announcement and
followed up with the skepticism of other scientists.”
Sandy Koufax has a solar equivalent. The great former Brooklyn and
Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher was famous for his ferocious
curveball. Now scientists have discovered that powerful bursts of
magnetism emanating from sunspots near the poles of the sun can be
arced back toward Earth by the solar magnetic field. The finding
creates another potential headache for people who run or rely on
GPS satellites, telecommunications networks, and power grids, but
it also means more reliable warnings about these electromagnetic
disturbances.
The sun’s coronal mass ejections (CMEs) are of more than just
scientific interest. When these gigantic bursts of electrically
charged, extremely hot gas particles hit satellites, they can
disrupt TV and radio transmissions, GPS signals, and cell phone
calls. They can also overload electric power grids on the ground
and pose a radiation hazard for astronauts in orbit. One recent
U.S. National Academy of Sciences study of the potential hazards
from a major CME hitting Earth estimated that the damage could
total more than a trillion dollars and require up to 10 years to
repair. Scientists have spent years attempting to track CMEs and
provide enough warning to allow precautions, such as placing
satellites in temporary safe modes.
So an international team analyzing data from NASA’s twin STEREO
spacecrafts, which provide three-dimensional observations of solar
activity, made an important discovery when they noticed something
that had been predicted but never observed: CMEs launched into
space from the sun’s high latitudes following trajectories that
brought them back toward the solar system’s equatorial plane—where
Earth resides. “We were really surprised and thought something
might be wrong with our algorithms,” says solar physicist Peter
Gallagher of Trinity College Dublin.
Further analyses revealed, however, that the curving solar storm
tracks were accurate. CMEs emerging from sunspots located at
latitudes of 60˚ or higher, north and south, can have their tracks
bent by the sun’s magnetic field and pushed out toward the planets
by the 500-kilometer-per-second solar wind. Gallagher and
colleagues report this week in Nature Communications that the
magnetic fields of CMEs also affect their trajectories. These
fields tend to rotate, and their rotation can either sharpen the
curve of the trajectory or flatten it out, depending on whether
the CME is traveling slower or faster than the solar wind at the
moment. The result is that, just like the breaking curveballs by a
Major League pitcher, the bent tracks of CMEs can vary.
Gallagher, who used to compile solar-activity warnings for NASA,
says the findings mean that space-weather forecasters need to
watch high-latitude ejections more carefully. The normal reaction
when CMEs emerge from the polar regions has been to think “that
they’re going to miss us.” The new data show that isn’t the case.
The imaging process the researchers have developed to track CMEs
is “quite innovative,” says Madhulika Guhathakurta, a solar
physicist with NASA’s STEREO mission in Washington, D.C. The
ability to track even curving CMEs through space “is of great
benefit to forecasters of space weather,” adds Guhathakurta, who
was not involved in the research.
The researchers have “clearly shown that [solar] storms launched
initially at high latitudes can still affect us at Earth,” says
solar physicist William Thompson, a contractor for the STEREO
mission at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight center in Greenbelt,
Maryland. Thompson adds that although scientists have long known
solar storms can change directions while close to the sun, “it was
surprising to find that this can still be the case farther along
[in their] journey.”