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![]() Hello, If you want to read more the document could be downloaded he http://www.pixelphase.com/sun/sun.pdf http://www.tikunim.co.il/sun/sun.pdf Its title is: The sun energy source is not nuclear fusion, but magnetic fields from the center of the Galaxy. The sun converts energy to mass and not mass to energy. Abstract: The sun energy source thought to be a nuclear fusion reactor inside the sun core. The sun is not heated by fusion reaction but by magnetic fields coming from the galactic center. The nuclear fusion is a by product of the magnetic fields heating. The changing magnetic fields from the galactic center induce electric currents inside the sun that heat the sun. The heat and the high kinetic energy of particles in the sun core, trigger high energy collisions that create the main constituents of matter, electron, proton and neutron. The collisions also fuse or nucleosynthesis heavier elements like deuterium, tritium, helium and lithium. This leads to the fact that the stars and galaxies constantly produce mass and energy. The article will explain the clockworks behinds the galaxies energy production. The galaxy energy and mass production cancel out the Big Bang theory and leads to a steady state cosmological model with large amount of new mass created that expand and accelerate the universe. |
#2
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![]() wrote in message ... Hello, If you want to read more the document could be downloaded he http://www.pixelphase.com/sun/sun.pdf http://www.tikunim.co.il/sun/sun.pdf There are so many glaring errors and fantasies in that document that it is hardly worthy of debate. It is utter ********, all of it. The most powerful magents so far discovered in the universe are the magnetars - special variants of super-dense pulsars that exhibit remarkably high flux - but at thousands of light-years, that flux has dwindled to such a weak value it could not move a compass needle, let alone trigger nuclear fusion or the transmutation of energy into matter. Get a grip, man! |
#3
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On Thu, 14 Dec 2006 17:15:05 GMT, "TeaTime"
wrote: wrote in message .. . Hello, If you want to read more the document could be downloaded he http://www.pixelphase.com/sun/sun.pdf http://www.tikunim.co.il/sun/sun.pdf There are so many glaring errors and fantasies in that document that it is hardly worthy of debate. It is utter ********, all of it. The most powerful magents so far discovered in the universe are the magnetars - special variants of super-dense pulsars that exhibit remarkably high flux - but at thousands of light-years, that flux has dwindled to such a weak value it could not move a compass needle, let alone trigger nuclear fusion or the transmutation of energy into matter. Get a grip, man! The solar cycle is a striking evidence for this theory. Every 11 years the sun is changing the direction of its dipole magnetic field. The current solar model assume incorrectly that the change of the magnetic fields is coming from inside the sun, but it is not, it is coming from the galactic center and it supply energy that heat the sun. |
#4
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![]() wrote in message ... On Thu, 14 Dec 2006 17:15:05 GMT, "TeaTime" wrote: The solar cycle is a striking evidence for this theory. Every 11 years the sun is changing the direction of its dipole magnetic field. The current solar model assume incorrectly that the change of the magnetic fields is coming from inside the sun, but it is not, it is coming from the galactic center and it supply energy that heat the sun. Agreed, the complete solar cycle of 22 years is evidence of a regular inversion of the sun's magnetic field. The behaviour of sunspots around and away from the solar maxima is evidence of the presence of a strong magnetic field. The precise mechanism for generating the field and causing it to alternate is not fully understood but is due to very dynamic processes within the sun itself. No doubt the same Coriolis forces which create natural circulating currents in the atmosphere of the planets also exist within stars too. The sun is rotating every 27 days (at the solar equator at least), so why not. Sgr A, a supposed black hole at the galactic centre, is estimated to be some 2.6 billion solar masses. There are no doubt intense magnetic fields in that region caused by the infall of dust and gas and accretion/ionisation in the surrounding disk, as suggested by the 'snake' flux tubes which are observed around there. However, the galactic centre is roughly 26,000 light years away. How do you propose that a magnetic flux of sufficient intensity and rate of oscillation as to bring about fusion reactions can act at so great a distance? If such were the case, we would not be living on a habitable planet for one thing. Where is evidence of this incredible universal magnetic flux? The magnetic fields of sun and major planets far exceeds any from much more distant sources and they are merely byproducts of local reactions of extreme magnitude. The Earth's magnetic poles are also known to reverse every so often (and in the time of dinosaurs, at an estimated 2.5 gauss, it was 80% stronger than it is now). |
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