Bro the sun has been going nuts lately. Solar cycle 24 was one of the lowest-activity cycles ever measured, and Solar cycle 25 is already peaking in intensity, to reach maximum around October 2023.
An interesting fact about the Sun: as the Sun reaches the extremes of its solar cycle, the rate of intensity change increases greatly, which is where CME's and solar flares are most common (at peaks) and where it is most likely for the Sun's magnetic field to reconstitute itself into a more unstable field for the next cycle. (at troughs)
It's strange. All the scientists in the world can't figure out why the Sun's gravitational field becomes more unstable towards the end of the solar cycle, when most of the magnetic tension is relieved. Only something guided by God's hand could do that.
Is it off base to say that it seems that most scientists don't totally understand how and why the Sun does what it does? Seems to me that's not an unfair characterization.
With so many brilliant minds working on this question, could it be that the frustration is due to an incorrect, or incomplete Solar model?
Are you familiar with the theory of the 'Electric Sun'? Prof. Donald Scott has done some excellent work on the model
Of all the celestial objects, the Sun (and stars in general) are the most mysterious. Somehow, billions if years ago, hydrogen-poor supernova remnant gas formed a ball of hydrogen which exploded to life as a ball of blazingly hot plasma, cooked by the neverending cycle of fusion. And somehow, hydrogen plasma, despite having few magnetic properties, has created a magnetic field extending to light-years away.
Within all of this, unknown forces divide and stretch the magnetic lines and form sunspots, which create flares and CMEs. None of this is well understood. Scientists have spent billions trying to learn about the forces if nature, and have discovered little. Nobody knows how Gravity works, only that it is and does.
Bro the sun has been going nuts lately. Solar cycle 24 was one of the lowest-activity cycles ever measured, and Solar cycle 25 is already peaking in intensity, to reach maximum around October 2023.
An interesting fact about the Sun: as the Sun reaches the extremes of its solar cycle, the rate of intensity change increases greatly, which is where CME's and solar flares are most common (at peaks) and where it is most likely for the Sun's magnetic field to reconstitute itself into a more unstable field for the next cycle. (at troughs)
It's strange. All the scientists in the world can't figure out why the Sun's gravitational field becomes more unstable towards the end of the solar cycle, when most of the magnetic tension is relieved. Only something guided by God's hand could do that.
Totally agree.
Is it off base to say that it seems that most scientists don't totally understand how and why the Sun does what it does? Seems to me that's not an unfair characterization.
With so many brilliant minds working on this question, could it be that the frustration is due to an incorrect, or incomplete Solar model?
Are you familiar with the theory of the 'Electric Sun'? Prof. Donald Scott has done some excellent work on the model
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eHi6ib9STPg
Of all the celestial objects, the Sun (and stars in general) are the most mysterious. Somehow, billions if years ago, hydrogen-poor supernova remnant gas formed a ball of hydrogen which exploded to life as a ball of blazingly hot plasma, cooked by the neverending cycle of fusion. And somehow, hydrogen plasma, despite having few magnetic properties, has created a magnetic field extending to light-years away.
Within all of this, unknown forces divide and stretch the magnetic lines and form sunspots, which create flares and CMEs. None of this is well understood. Scientists have spent billions trying to learn about the forces if nature, and have discovered little. Nobody knows how Gravity works, only that it is and does.
Yeah, that's where all those billions of dollars go. Towards "science".