Re: Honest Question...Poleshift and the Pyramids...Pole/Axis Shift in Cayce Quotes
In Article <fc8f94e.0110241040.47383465@posting.google.com> Idon't wrote:
> Reviewed that link and some others. Thanks. I don't fully
> inderstand the technology used for detecting Solar
> magnetism, but they certainly seem to be seeing it.
Let's examine their claim in detail, of WHY solar flares et al have a
magnetic basis. They measure x-rays, light rays, and all of this
somehow is supposed to be caused by magnetism. Is this the case on
Earth? We bend light rays with a magnetic field? Can we do this in the
lab? X-rays are excited by an electrical flow, yes, but do we bend
x-rays in a direction with a magnetic field ALONE? Can we do this in the
lab? We heat something to 1,800,000ºF in the lab to see how it
behaves? What PROOF do they have that magnetism is involved in sun
cycles, is the driver? None.
Sunspot Cycle Predictions, linked from ..
http://science.msfc.nasa.gov/headlines/y2001/ast15feb_1.htm
MSFC Solar Physics Branch members Wilson, Hathaway,
and Reichmann have studied the sunspot record for
characteristic behavior that might help in predicting
future sunspot activity. Our current predictions of solar
activity for the next few years can be found at this link.
Although sunspots themselves produce only minor
effects on solar emissions, the magnetic activity that
accompanies the sunspots can produce dramatic changes
in the ultraviolet and soft x-ray emission levels. These
changes over the solar cycle have important consequences
for the Earth's upper atmosphere.
The White-Light Corona, linked from ..
http://science.msfc.nasa.gov/headlines/y2001/ast15feb_1.htm
The Corona is the Sun's outer atmosphere. It is visible
during total eclipses of the Sun as a pearly white crown
surrounding the Sun. The corona displays a variety of
features including streamers, plumes, and loops.
These features change from eclipse to eclipse and the
overall shape of the corona changes with the sunspot cycle.
However, during the few fleeting minutes of totality few,
if any, changes are seen in these coronal features.
The Emission Line Corona, linked from ..
http://science.msfc.nasa.gov/headlines/y2001/ast15feb_1.htm
Early observations of the visible spectrum of the corona
revealed bright emission lines at wavelengths that did not
correspond to any known materials. This led astronomers
to propose the existence of coronium as the principal gas
in the corona. The true nature of the corona remained a
mystery until it was determined that the coronal gases are
super-heated to temperatures greater than 1,000,000ºC
(1,800,000ºF). At these high temperatures both hydrogen
and helium (the two dominant elements) are completely
stripped of their electrons. Even minor elements like
carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen are stripped down to bare
nuclei. Only the heavier trace elements like iron and
calcium are able to retain a few of their electrons in this
intense heat.
The X-Ray Corona, linked from ..
http://science.msfc.nasa.gov/headlines/y2001/ast15feb_1.htm
The corona shines brightly in x-rays because of its high
temperature. On the other hand, the "cool" solar photosphere
emits very few x-rays. This allows us to view the corona
across the disk of the Sun when we observe the Sun in X-rays.
To do this we must first design optics that can image x-rays
and then we must get above the Earth's atmosphere.
Chromosphere, linked from ..
http://science.msfc.nasa.gov/headlines/y2001/ast15feb_1.htm
The chromosphere is an irregular layer above the photosphere
where the temperature rises from 6000° C to about 20,000° C.
At these higher temperatures hydrogen emits light that
gives off a reddish color (H-alpha emission). This colorful
emission can be seen in prominences that project above the
limb of the sun during total solar eclipses. This is what gives
the chromosphere its name (color-sphere). When the Sun is
viewed through a spectrograph or a filter that isolates
the H-alpha emission, a wealth of new features can be seen.
These features include the chromospheric network of
magnetic field elements, bright plage around sunspots,