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Sun's Hot Surface: Influence of Jupiter on our Sun~~~
I have re-written the article. Hope you understand it.
Sun's Hot Surface: Influence of Jupiter on our Sun By: Jon Riley B.A., Toronto, Canada, all pictures at; www.kfcircuits.com/Sun.pdf Abstract All planets or moons that have active volcanoes with magma, such as Earth and Io, rotate at high speeds (Earth 24 hours). It is possible in theory that if the largest planet, Jupiter gives the Sun elongation (bulge), and with the Sun's rotation at 25 days as being a high speed, since the Sun's mass is large, the hot surface maybe the result of high rotation speed and elongation (bulge). Elongation is when the two bodies bulge one another and friction is created when the bodies spin within the bulge. A tide on Earth is when the Moon and Earth line up to force the waters of the ocean into a bulge giving two high and two low tides. In the same way, the largest planet Jupiter may force the Sun into elongation and create a hot surface. Moreover the Sun maybe is in extreme elongation when Jupiter, Saturn and the Sun are in lineal orbit and increase the solar energy to Earth during these times making hot climates possibly every thousand years. Also, Earth's magma and the Sun's hot surface maybe the result of the same action. Introduction The hot surface of the Sun and the magma of Earth come from the same theory, having a high rotation speed and being elongated from other planets or moons, that is, bulging with another body and spinning within the bulge. Earth rotates in 24 hours and Io in 1.7 days and both have a hot centre with magma. All other satellites and planets in our solar system rotate at roughly 15 days and have zero volcanic activity. See table 1. A second factor is needed for magma, having a satellite or being a satellite. And a third factor is needed for magma, a similar mass of planet or satellite. The old theory of where magma comes from is that there is pressure on the planet from itself. This is not possible if other planets or moons similar to Earth have no volcanoes and magma. With the Sun, it is thought that the hot surface is from something similar to a nuclear reaction and will burn out in 10 billion years. This is not so, the Sun is hot due to the orbit it has with Jupiter and the two form a friction. Table 1: Rotation Speeds of Planets and Moons planet or moon rotation speed - Earth days earth 1 earth's moon 0 Venus 20 Mars (no large Satellites) 1.05 Sun 25 Mercury 58.6462 Io 1.769138 Europa 3.55 Ganymede 7.15 Callisto 16.689 Since high rotation is needed for the creation of magma, looking at table one, it is noted that all planets of moons with low rotation speeds have zero volcanic activity. And Earth and Io have high rotation speeds giving way to volcanic activity. Mars has a satellite with a rotation speed of 1.05 days and would therefore have magma but the two moons of Mars are very small with a mass of Deimos at 1.8 x 10^15 kg and Phobos at 1.08 x 10^16 kg compared to the mass of Earth's Moon Luna at 7.36 x 10^22 kg. Earth's Moon Luna would have magma if it rotated but does not rotate. As for Venus which has volcanoes it may elongate with the sun since it has no moon. Looking a figure 2 one can see that the planet is forced to be elliptical with high rotation giving way to the Earth' s crust bending with friction and creating magma. The tides on earth have two low and two high. In the same way tides exist due to the elongation of the planet by the moon. Old faithful in Yellowstone Park has a period similar to the moon's tide but stems from the earth magma. Since the tides of Earth and magma of Earth have similarities, Earth's moon, Luna, creates both. Old Faithful has almost a daily burst to the hour. However, the Luna rotates every 27.5 days around the Earth. Therefore in days the number is 27.5/30 in a month of 30 days. Equal to .916 days, that is, for every Earth day, Luna rotates .916. Old Faithful is active every .916 days showing that Luna is the source of activity. As said earlier a third factor is needed, high rotation of the planet. As Earth rotates in 24 hours in the elongation of a .916 day of Luna, friction is given on the crust giving magma and energy for Old Faithful. Magnetic Poles In theory if the high rotation of a planet and being with a satellite creates magma other forces must result. The magnetic force of Earth's two magnetic poles must also be from these two factors. As the planet rotates with a moon the planet acts as a giant turbine creating a magnetic current and two poles. In theory all stars, planets and moons with high rotation and elongation, will have magnetic currents and magnetic poles. The Solar System is like Jupiter If it is true and the Sun has a hot surface due to being with a giant planet, Jupiter, it may be correct to judge our solar system as being similar to the area of Jupiter and Jupiter's moons. Jupiter and Jupiter's moons are a tiny solar system compared to our solar system. And the Sun with planets is a giant Jupiter system with moons. |
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Sun's Hot Surface: Influence of Jupiter on our Sun~~~
"granite stone" wrote in message oups.com... I have re-written the article. Hope you understand it. Sun's Hot Surface: Influence of Jupiter on our Sun By: Jon Riley B.A., Toronto, Canada, all pictures at; www.kfcircuits.com/Sun.pdf Abstract All planets or moons that have active volcanoes with magma, such as Earth and Io, rotate at high speeds (Earth 24 hours). ROFLMAO!!! |
#4
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Sun's Hot Surface: Influence of Jupiter on our Sun~~~
granite stone posted:
All planets or moons that have active volcanoes with magma, such as Earth and Io, rotate at high speeds (Earth 24 hours). snip... Table 1: Rotation Speeds of Planets and Moons planet or moon rotation speed - Earth days earth 1 earth's moon 0 Venus 20 Mars (no large Satellites) 1.05 Sun 25 Mercury 58.6462 Io 1.769138 Europa 3.55 Ganymede 7.15 Callisto 16.689 No, I'm afraid not. Venus rotates *very* slowly (243 days, *not* 20). It had (and probably still has) active volcanoes. The Earth's moon rotates (with respect to the stars) in a period of 27.322 days. It is in tidal lock with the Earth (as is Io with Jupiter), so only one face is observable from Earth, but it *still* rotates. If you lived on Jupiter, you would also see only one side of Io. As for the rest of your posting, there is so much wrong with it that I can only say you need to take some basic science courses and come back when you understand what their teachers have told you (and stay off of sci.astro.amateur, as this is rather off-topic for that newsgroup). Clear skies to you. -- David W. Knisely Prairie Astronomy Club: http://www.prairieastronomyclub.org Hyde Memorial Observatory: http://www.hydeobservatory.info/ ********************************************** * Attend the 13th Annual NEBRASKA STAR PARTY * * July 23-28, 2006, Merritt Reservoir * * http://www.NebraskaStarParty.org * ********************************************** |
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Sun's Hot Surface: Influence of Jupiter on our Sun~~~
Umm, Mars rotates roughly the same speed as the earth, and as far as I know, it has no active volcanoes. NEXT! George As I said in the article, Mars is the same as Earth with rotation and size but has no large moons. |
#6
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Sun's Hot Surface: Influence of Jupiter on our Sun~~~
According to my theory, all stars would have a planet like Jupiter
making it a star. How do you know some stars have no planets? |
#7
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Sun's Hot Surface: Influence of Jupiter on our Sun~~~
Your facts are wrong. You are getting an obit time mixed up with a
rotation time. Insults are not needed. |
#8
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Sun's Hot Surface: Influence of Jupiter on our Sun~~~
granite stone posted:
Your facts are wrong. You are getting an obit time mixed up with a rotation time. No, I'm afraid that your "facts" are what is wrong. You don't understand that rotation is not necessarily relative. The moon does rotate with respect to an interial frame. It just happens to rotate at about the same rate as it revolves around the Earth which is why we only see mostly one side when we stand here and look at it. If we somehow remmoved the Earth, the moon would continue rotating every 27 days or so. If you were standing on the sun and looked at the moon with a telescope, you would be able to see each side as it rotates, just as when we look at Io from Earth, we can see it rotate as well. With respect to the sun, the Earth's moon rotates. If you were standing on the moon and looking at the stars, you would see them rise and set. With respect to the stars, the moon rotates. The moon's orbit is also not circular, so at times, its velocity is different than its rotation speed. Thus, we can see the moon appear to rock back and forth thus demonstrating that it *does* rotate. Venus does rotate, but not in 20 days! This is again an incorrect statement. Insults are not needed. No insults were provided! You don't appear to understand things when many people here have been patient enough to try to explain things to you. You can't seem to grasp how rotation works (as well as a bunch of other things which you made mistakes on). The fact is that you *need* to take some courses in the sciences so you can understand basic astronomical concepts. You also haven't read the sci.astro.amateur charter which states that discussions like this are somewhat off-topic for that newsgroup (sci.astro.amateur is for the hobby of amateur astronomy and not speculative scientific discussions). To continue with your postings here is to invite derision. So be it.... -- David W. Knisely Prairie Astronomy Club: http://www.prairieastronomyclub.org Hyde Memorial Observatory: http://www.hydeobservatory.info/ ********************************************** * Attend the 13th Annual NEBRASKA STAR PARTY * * July 23-28, 2006, Merritt Reservoir * * http://www.NebraskaStarParty.org * ********************************************** |
#9
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Sun's Hot Surface: Influence of Jupiter on our Sun~~~
granite stone wrote:
According to my theory, all stars would have a planet like Jupiter making it a star. How do you know some stars have no planets? How do you know that all stars *do* have planets? The is *no* requirement that a star have planets to be considered a star. Sirius-B very likely has no planets, and many very low-mass or extremely high-mass high-luminosity stars probably don't have them either. Many eccentric binary stars probably do not have planets, as the wildness of the orbits and the gravitational perturbations would cause any planetary bodies to either collide with one of the stars or be ejected from the system. -- David W. Knisely Prairie Astronomy Club: http://www.prairieastronomyclub.org Hyde Memorial Observatory: http://www.hydeobservatory.info/ ********************************************** * Attend the 13th Annual NEBRASKA STAR PARTY * * July 23-28, 2006, Merritt Reservoir * * http://www.NebraskaStarParty.org * ********************************************** |
#10
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Sun's Hot Surface: Influence of Jupiter on our Sun~~~
In message , David Knisely
writes granite stone posted: Your facts are wrong. You are getting an obit time mixed up with a rotation time. No, I'm afraid that your "facts" are what is wrong. David, before you encourage this offensive little troll any more you should know that eventually his reply will be "****off go to hell." (do a search if you want). |
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