Electric
Universe Continues to "Baffle" Astronomers
By Michael Goodspeed
see
also
The Electric Sun
Hypothesis
see also
The Electric
Sun/Earth Connection
see also
Electric
Discharge : The Source of Solar Radiant
Energy
The 19th century humorist Josh Billings once said, "There is
no greater evidence of superior intelligence than to be
surprised at nothing." One wonders how today's astronomers
and astrophysicists might feel about this statement. Space
scientists continually express surprise and perplexity over
new discoveries -- from the energetic outbursts of comets, to
the electric sun/earth connection, to the anomalous motions
of galaxies, to the vast, filamentary jets seen stretching
over intergalactic distances, our increased technological
ability to detect space phenomena has only increased
astronomers' surprise and confusion.
But the real measure of a person's intelligence -- and
integrity -- is how he or she responds to life's inevitable
surprises. Does one deny and resist these revelations,
clinging furiously to misguided beliefs? Or is one content to
be proved wrong, perhaps suffering a blow to the ego but
moving a step closer to real understanding?
Space
scientists will admit to surprise or even astonishment, but
this seldom prevents them from claiming to understand what
they're seeing, even when the surprises refute their most
basic assumptions. A good example of this is seen in
astronomers' recent observations of a "baffling cosmic
explosion" that "seems to have come out of nowhere." The
explosion is a long duration gamma-ray burster. Astronomers
have long believed that such a burst is powered by the death
of a massive star. But satellite images reveal no galaxy
anywhere near the proximity of the burst.
"Here
we have this very bright burst, yet it's surrounded by
darkness on all sides," said team member Brad Cenko of the
California Institute of Technology. "The nearest galaxy is
more than 88,000 light-years away, and there's almost no gas
lying between the burst and Earth."
The
Space.com report on the "explosion" reads: "Because the
massive stars believed to produce GRBs live fast and die
young, they don't have time to wander from their birthplace,
which is usually dense clouds of gas and dust inside of
galaxies. So the explosion raise [sic] the perplexing
question of how a massive star could be found so far from a
galaxy.
"If a massive star died far away from any galaxy, the key
question is, how did it manage to be born there?' said team
member Derek Fox of Penn State.
Here
we see investigators, though openly "baffled," still refusing
to think outside their models, even when direct observation
contradicts them. One radical possibility they're not
considering is that their fundamental assumptions about
gamma-ray bursters (GRBs) are incorrect -- they are not
generated by the death of a massive star, their ideas about
star formation and the nature of stars are incorrect, and the
energies of the explosions are far less than standard theory
calculates. This is, in fact, the position of proponents of
plasma cosmology, and of the Electric Universe.
Astronomers'
beliefs about GRBs have been thrown into disarray before. In
July of 2005, a burst that lasted a tenth of a second was
followed thirty seconds later by a 150-second x-ray flash.
The location of the burst was pinpointed, and a few days
later, the Hubble Space Telescope obtained an image of the
optical afterglow and the "host" galaxy. According to
conventional theories, the redshift of this galaxy determined
its distance at about two billion light years. To appear as
bright as it did, the GRB must have given off more energy in
that one-tenth of a second than the entire galaxy gives off
in a year! The only mechanisms imaginable in a
gravity-dominated universe that could be this "energy-dense"
are extreme supernovae and neutron-star or black-hole
mergers. Because no supernova was observed and because the
GRB occurred at the edge of the galaxy (most black holes are
thought to reside in galactic cores) this GRB was considered
to be the result of a merger of neutron stars.
But
as repeatedly demonstrated on the pages of Thunderbolts.info,
redshift is not a reliable measure of an object's distance.
As far back as the 1960's, astronomer Halton Arp began
documenting instances where two or more galaxies and/or
quasars were associated, or even physically connected, in
contradiction of the assumption that their different
redshifts meant that one should be millions or even billions
of light-years farther away than the other. Therefore, the
energy of the 2005 GRB was almost certainly much less than
astronomers believe, and the "host" galaxy appears small and
faint because it really is small and faint -- not because
it's far away.
Likewise, the recently observed "baffling cosmic explosion"
may not have "come out of nowhere." Although it cannot
definitively be said from an electrical perspective what
creates gamma-ray bursters, we can say with great confidence
that they are not caused by the death of stars, and they are
electrical in nature. Astronomers study GRBs based on their
spectra and their time histories. The spectra indicate
emission of X-rays from highly excited ions and from fast
electrons. The time histories vary greatly but generally show
a fast rise of energy and a gradual fading. Sometimes one or
more lower-energy pulses precede the peak energy pulse; often
other spikes, which also show the fast-rise-slower-decline
profile, interrupt the decline in energy.
The
excited ions, fast electrons, and range of energy curves are
common properties of LIGHTNING. They occur -- at the
appropriate energy levels -- in lab discharges, atmospheric
lightning, solar flares, supernovae, and, now, in GRBs. To
try and explain these energetic patterns, conventional
theorists do what they always do when faced with the
inexplicable -- they call on invisible, untestable,
unmeasurable, super-powerful gravitational forces to do the
hard way (or the IMPOSSIBLE way) what electricity does
routinely. Experiments and computer simulations have shown
that plasma phenomena can be scaled over many orders of
magnitude -- that is, they behave in much the same manner and
obey the same principles from the atomic scale to the
galactic. In other words, the cosmic explosion that so
"baffles" astronomers is not baffling to those familiar with
experimental plasma science. It is exactly what it seems to
be -- a plasma discharge in space.
So from where might this discharge have originated? In an
Electric Universe, galaxies are not isolated objects -- they
are connected electrically. Across the immense volume of
intergalactic space, electric currents, minuscule across
short distances, possess the power to organize galactic
structure. Such currents, unrecognized by modern astronomy,
are fully capable of producing rare instances of plasma
instability -- a high-energy event provoked by converging
currents in a "z-pinch." The electric discharges provoked by
pinching currents have been studied in the plasma laboratory
for decades. And the phenomenon is incomparably more
efficient in producing GRBs than the untested, gravitational
events envisioned by mainstream theorists. Moreover, evidence
continues to mount that cosmological redshift is proportional
to the electrical stresses in a discharge, in which case the
measured redshift cannot reliably tell us the distance of an
event.
The mainstream's bafflement over electrical phenomena in
space cannot be resolved by ad hoc theoretical inventions
that will only be refuted again in the future. Instead of
"going back to the drawing board" to try and save failed
theories, the time is long passed for astronomers to question
WHY space discovery has so relentlessly "baffled" them, and
to seek the PATTERNS consistent in the "surprises." When seen
without ideological prejudice, these patterns tell us one
thing -- we live in an electric universe.
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