11-04-2021, 07:55 AM
I will try!
Start with the well established heliospheric current sheet, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heliospher...rent_sheet.
Quoting one small section, "As the sun rotates, it magnetic field twists into an Archimedean spiral as it extends through the solar system."
Its shape is like a twirling "ballerina skirt". All this is well known. Newer and less universally accepted but still within mainstream is the hypothesis that this wave interacts with the Earth's tectonic plates as it hits us (roughly every 25 days) and may exacerbate events associated with plate movement (e.g., volcanoes and earthquakes).
Now, it has been theorized, again in referred literature, that the galaxy exhibits the same behavior. So there is a Galactic Current Sheet, which being newer is not universally vetted. This is a much, much more energetic wave that hits the Earth much less frequently. See SuspiciousObservers.org.
They posit that it hits about every 12,000 years thereby explaining the fairly well established cycle of Earth catastrophes. As it hits, volcanoes, quakes, pole shifts, even global warming (note that warming is now seen on Mars, Triton, etc) can ensue along with meteors since the charged wave attracts ionized galactic dust. Worse by far, it can trigger solar instability causing a micro-nova, which have been seen at our closest star neighbors, Barnard's Star and Alpha Centauri, within the last decade.
Just wondering if this is tied to anything given we are due for it (12,000 is up). In fact, the poles have been plodding away from their past location for 100 years and are now racing away in the past few years.
Whew! Hope that clarifies the question, but I bet not...
Start with the well established heliospheric current sheet, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heliospher...rent_sheet.
Quoting one small section, "As the sun rotates, it magnetic field twists into an Archimedean spiral as it extends through the solar system."
Its shape is like a twirling "ballerina skirt". All this is well known. Newer and less universally accepted but still within mainstream is the hypothesis that this wave interacts with the Earth's tectonic plates as it hits us (roughly every 25 days) and may exacerbate events associated with plate movement (e.g., volcanoes and earthquakes).
Now, it has been theorized, again in referred literature, that the galaxy exhibits the same behavior. So there is a Galactic Current Sheet, which being newer is not universally vetted. This is a much, much more energetic wave that hits the Earth much less frequently. See SuspiciousObservers.org.
They posit that it hits about every 12,000 years thereby explaining the fairly well established cycle of Earth catastrophes. As it hits, volcanoes, quakes, pole shifts, even global warming (note that warming is now seen on Mars, Triton, etc) can ensue along with meteors since the charged wave attracts ionized galactic dust. Worse by far, it can trigger solar instability causing a micro-nova, which have been seen at our closest star neighbors, Barnard's Star and Alpha Centauri, within the last decade.
Just wondering if this is tied to anything given we are due for it (12,000 is up). In fact, the poles have been plodding away from their past location for 100 years and are now racing away in the past few years.
Whew! Hope that clarifies the question, but I bet not...