07.03.2013 Views

A Beginner's View of Our Electric Universe - New

A Beginner's View of Our Electric Universe - New

A Beginner's View of Our Electric Universe - New

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

Given the very reasonable case now established for powerful differentially charged plasma existing throughout<br />

space, if there ever could be good reason based on good science and visual evidence to pay serious attention to<br />

an electric explanation <strong>of</strong> galaxy and star formation and operation, then this, I suggest, must be it.<br />

Stars, Their Combinations, Planets and Moons: As time passed after these almighty birthing events and<br />

as galaxies with their stars grew older and moved around, the vast regions <strong>of</strong> ionised matter left thinly spread<br />

between stars would have facilitated further electrical events that will still apply today. Here, due to the<br />

undoubted ongoing cycles <strong>of</strong> build-up and release <strong>of</strong> electric charge within and between these regions and<br />

with the motion <strong>of</strong> stars themselves, the overall effect would be to bring about periods <strong>of</strong> electrical instability<br />

between individual stars and between stars and their immediate surroundings. On occasion, stars experiencing<br />

this would be forced to take on an excess <strong>of</strong> charge from their electric environment. This would occur due to<br />

high densities <strong>of</strong> current impinging directly on a star’s photosphere ‘surface’, where that density would be<br />

subject to change based on the dynamic nature <strong>of</strong> the other electrical interactions going on in the star’s wider<br />

environment. Individual stars could therefore conceivably be forced to take on levels <strong>of</strong> charge that their mass<br />

could not comfortably cope with. This being the case, an electrical stabilisation process would be required that<br />

would involve ‘shedding’ some <strong>of</strong> this accumulated charge in some way.<br />

It seems to me this type <strong>of</strong> activity is one that just had to have gone on. It likely still does and probably always<br />

will. Much <strong>of</strong> the reasoning behind this ‘electric stress shedding’ process goes back to a star’s material makeup<br />

and physical size, which for now, we will think <strong>of</strong> as a large ball <strong>of</strong> gas in the plasma state that has a much<br />

smaller solid matter core. These are the two main things that would dictate the level <strong>of</strong> electrical charge (stress)<br />

that stars <strong>of</strong> all types and gas giant planets could comfortably live with in their own environments. If electrically<br />

over-stressed, stars will naturally seek a lower stress situation by dividing into parts or by shedding an amount<br />

<strong>of</strong> their plasma gas or solid matter into space. To help picture the concept <strong>of</strong> dividing into parts, imagine gently<br />

pouring a small amount <strong>of</strong> water on to a hotplate. If the hotplate is cold, the water will tend to stay together, but<br />

if the hotplate is very hot, then the water will quickly be forced to separate into smaller blobs as it absorbs heat<br />

energy from the hotplate. This is obviously not a perfect analogy but it provides a useful mental picture.<br />

Most <strong>of</strong> the stars we see are not just one object, they actually consist <strong>of</strong> two or more related objects, so perhaps<br />

they should really be thought <strong>of</strong> as ‘star systems’. This is a well-known and accepted fact - estimates exist<br />

that up to 80% <strong>of</strong> all stars have at least one partner that is <strong>of</strong>ten so dim it cannot be seen. The electrical stress<br />

reduction process just described tells us that stars can split into two or actually even more parts in order to<br />

reduce the electrical stress they experience [6-5] . This makes basic electrical sense and it is a process that can be<br />

reproduced in the electrical laboratory where experiments involving the formation and manipulation <strong>of</strong> balls <strong>of</strong><br />

plasma lightning have been carried out.<br />

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

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!