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A Beginner's View of Our Electric Universe - New

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This pinch process is better known as a ‘Z-pinch’ or ‘Bennet pinch’ event. The Z-pinch is a phenomenon that<br />

forms a concentrated plasma structure called a ‘plasmoid’. This structure has natural spin and can be pictured<br />

mentally, as if you were looking down on the centre <strong>of</strong> a whirlpool <strong>of</strong> fantastic energy as it draws everything<br />

from its surroundings into it from all directions.<br />

A galaxy formed by a Z-pinch event © author<br />

Think <strong>of</strong> this on a galactic scale where a Z-pinch event takes<br />

place at the meeting point <strong>of</strong> two BCs to form a spinning<br />

plasmoid. This energy whirlpool draws towards it every<br />

form <strong>of</strong> ionised and normal matter from across distances<br />

<strong>of</strong> hundreds <strong>of</strong> thousands <strong>of</strong> light years. The result is that<br />

all the matter required to form a galaxy is eventually<br />

brought together, with the greatest amount <strong>of</strong> energy and<br />

electromagnetic (EM) influence being concentrated at the<br />

centre <strong>of</strong> the mass. Thereafter, a form <strong>of</strong> ‘maintenance<br />

current’ from the original BCs continues to flow into the<br />

central plasmoid. It is the powerful EM force that dominates<br />

in the association between all the collected matter so it<br />

appears as a solid spinning disk. This is why galaxies hold<br />

together as complete structures and it is the basis on which natural rotation can be explained. These are the<br />

galaxy formation and operation questions that the gravity model has unsuccessfully tried to explain [6-2] .<br />

Star Formation: In and around the main bodies <strong>of</strong> galaxies,<br />

smaller BC networks go through the same kind <strong>of</strong> process,<br />

this time in the formation <strong>of</strong> stars. Eventually, through<br />

uncountable instances <strong>of</strong> this process, most <strong>of</strong> the available<br />

plasma and normal matter will have been drawn together<br />

leaving great expanses between new stars which contain<br />

only sparsely distributed ionised particles <strong>of</strong> dust and gas.<br />

As mentioned previously, we see stars <strong>of</strong> all sizes, colours,<br />

brightnesses and apparent behaviours, and here is where<br />

these differences can be accounted for as we consider the<br />

variable aspects <strong>of</strong> star formation.<br />

A star formed with others like pearls on a string © author<br />

6 | The <strong>Electric</strong> <strong>Universe</strong> answers I see

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