I believe we will find that this whole universe orbits based upon energetic, quantum gravity fields of dark/vacuum energy between bodies. Earth's magnetic field protects us from a lot of the energetic stuff, but what gets through creates our weather disturbances and ionizes the atmosphere.
When you pull a vacuum in a vacuum(of space) you get rewarded by more energetic vacuum from a decaying, multi-dimensional brane (like the Sun). Stewart On Mon, Sep 30, 2013 at 8:32 AM, Mauro Lacy <ma...@lacy.com.ar> wrote: > ** > Mark Jurich wrote: > > FYI: arXiv of this paper: > http://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/1106/1106.0847.pdf > > Interesting paper, thanks. > > I found it odd that nobody mentions the *positions* of the planets > (Jupiter, mainly), during solar max. Maybe to try to avoid the association > with astrology, the constellations, and related pseudo-scientific stuff? > > Well, here's something to be said about it: the association of these > things with astrology: unavoidable. The good side of it?: a new astrology > must be developed. A quantitative, scientific, serious, non-misleading > astrology, if you want. > > Now, I don't have a scientific reputation to risk, so here you have it: as > we're now in the middle of (an unusually quiet, quieter in a century, by > the way) solar max, it's very easy to see that Jupiter is now in Gemini. > And Gemini is opposite Sagittarius, which marks the general direction to > the center of the galaxy. > > So, if the 'gravitational lens' theory is to be believed, Jupiter is now > amplifying or focusing energies that come from outside the galaxy, from the > general direction of Gemini. > > And, of course, a potential different explanation comes to mind: it's not > a 'gravitational lens' effect, but a 'cosmic circuit' kind of thing. > Jupiter "closes" the circuit with the center of the galaxy, with the Sun in > the middle. And sunspots appear on the surface of the Sun as a consequence. > > There you have it: the positions of the planets, the constellations, and, > of course, the center of the galaxy. Only thing missing? crossing of the > galactic plane. :-) > > Regards, > Mauro >