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			from  
			Thunderbolts.info Website 
			
			Dec 30, 2004 
  
			
			  
			
			NOTES ON THE 
			PICTURES ABOVE: 
			 
			TOP ROW: Left: Pattern traced by an electric spark across an 
			insulating surface dusted with fine powder. Note the parallelism of 
			the spark paths and the tendency for the tributaries to join the 
			main channel at near right angles. Note also the deep secondary 
			channel running along the center of the primary. 
			Center: Lunar rilles reveal features remarkably similar to the scars left by 
			electrical arcs. Sharp turns unrelated to topographic inclination, 
			and circular or oblong pits strategically placed along the rilles, 
			are two key pointers to electrical forces. 
			Right: With the curvature 
			of the Moon as backdrop, this photograph of the Aristarchus Plateau 
			underscores the extraordinary length of many lunar rilles--far 
			exceeding any observed lava flows on Earth. Note also that some of 
			the rilles cut across elevated terrain, a fact that precludes 
			creation by flowing liquid. 
			 
			LOWER LEFT: This bolt of lightning carved a 40-foot furrow 
			across the infield of a baseball diamond. The more sinuous path 
			taken by the lightning can be seen roughly traced in the bottom of 
			the furrow, a key to understanding the patterns of electrically 
			machined rilles on bodies in space. 
			 
			MIDDLE RIGHT: Schröter’s Valley on the Moon, commonly said to 
			be caused by basaltic lava flows from volcanic sources. A much more 
			narrow stream of pits winds its way down the valley. 
			 
			LOWER RIGHT: The 700 km Martian rille, Nirgal Vallis. Note 
			the tiny tributaries for such a gigantic channel, the extreme 
			sinuosity, and the “fretted” cookie cutter appearance of the “lower” 
			reaches, all inconsistent with the dynamics of flowing water. 
			
			  
			
			Laboratory study of the 
			way electric arcs affect surface materials will soon 
			challenge traditional geologic models. The evidence will show that 
			the cosmic “thunderbolt” dominated planetary 
			evolution. 
			 
			When speaking of solar system history, proponents of the 
			
			electric 
			universe realize that their message can create huge difficulties in 
			communication. Abbreviated “first glimpses” of their 
			viewpoint will provoke incredulity, shock, and irritation. In the 
			electric model, the actual history of our solar system 
			does not resemble the currently accepted theories of the sciences. 
			Therefore, the reader must be asked to suspend all prior beliefs on 
			the subject, including matters thought to have been settled decades, 
			or even centuries ago. 
			 
			In the later years of his life, Nobel Laureate Hannes Alfven, 
			the founder of plasma science, reached a startling conclusion about 
			the nature of the universe. He said that gravitational systems are 
			the “ashes” of prior electrical systems. This remarkable idea would 
			require the investigation of our solar system to move in an entirely 
			new direction. But the history of science suggests that such 
			dramatic turns do not occur easily, or without a jolt of unnerving 
			proportions. 
			 
			In contrast to conventional theorists, advocates of the electric 
			universe contend that as recently as several thousand years ago, 
			planets moved under the influence of electrified plasma, a medium 
			that can easily overwhelm gravity. Orbits changed, and catastrophic 
			electrical encounters altered the terrain, the climates, and the 
			atmospheres of planets, including our Earth. 
			 
			Though the duration of instability is unknown, the final episodes of 
			catastrophe occurred in the time of our early ancestors, who 
			witnessed celestial wonders beyond anything imagined today. 
			Charged planets and moons were held in a close array by electrical 
			forces and were seen as huge spheres in the sky. In periods of 
			instability, plasma discharges passed between planets, 
			capturing the obsessive attention of human witnesses. Ancient sky 
			worshippers observed the resulting plasma configurations as the 
			discharges mutated from one unstable phase to another, seemingly 
			alive, intelligent—and habitually combative. It was these events, 
			often earthshaking and terrifying, that supplied the raw content of 
			world mythology and inspired the great religious and symbolic 
			traditions of antiquity. 
			 
			Planetary science will play a critical role in testing the 
			electric universe hypothesis. The claimed events could not have 
			occurred without leaving vast physical scars on all the rocky bodies 
			involved. Because most of the rocky bodies in the solar system have 
			surfaces unaffected by atmospheric or fluid erosion, they must have 
			preserved a relatively pristine record of these events. The scars 
			should still be visible today. 
			 
			To produce the discharge formations claimed by the electric 
			theorists, one must envision interplanetary lightning raking across 
			the surfaces of the celestial bodies, alternately removing material 
			and implanting material. This re-sculpting of surfaces occurred 
			through intensely violent action, in stark contrast to geologic 
			processes occurring on Earth today. But presently-observed 
			terrestrial events provide most of the content of modern geological 
			theory. Hence, the 
			
			electric 
			universe challenges standard theory at 
			the level of underpinnings.  
			 
			Charged bodies within a plasma develop insulating “sheaths” 
			or plasma cells around them. In space, we call these 
			sheaths “magnetospheres”. So long as charged planets remain outside 
			each other’s plasma sheaths they will stay electrically "invisible" 
			to each other. But two planets in close approach, moving deeply into 
			each other’s sheaths, will cause the electrical insulation to break 
			down, and the resulting arcing will leave surface features that can 
			only be obvious once the question is raised. 
			 
			No inquiry into the issues raised here could afford to overlook the 
			thousands of channels torn across surfaces of planets and moons. The 
			lunar surface, for example, presents huge channels, called "sinuous 
			rilles”, first observed through earthbound telescopes, then viewed 
			close up from Apollo craft orbiting the Moon in the late 1960’s. 
			[Photograph above, upper right] 
			 
			As seen from Earth, some lunar rilles look so much like a 
			terrestrial river that early astronomers wondered if subsurface 
			water might be present on the Moon. Yet closer views 
			showed that the characteristic features of rivers—tributary systems, 
			braids, smoothly curved meanders, delta fans, alluvial flood plains, 
			etc.—are either missing or oddly displayed in lunar rilles. 
			 
			Before the space age, only the Moon could be seen with 
			enough detail to reveal the existence of sinuous rilles. But 
			after more than three decades of space exploration, virtually 
			identical terrain is known to exist on every closely observed body 
			of the solar system—on all of the rocky inner planets, on the 
			Martian moon Phobos, on the moons of the gas giants, 
			on asteroids, and even on comets. How did the same morphology 
			occur in such radically different environments?  
			 
			The mystery only deepens as we learn more about these celestial 
			bodies. Many space objects are too hot, too dry, too airless, too 
			cold, or too small to have rivers of water. Where any kind of 
			flowing liquid is excluded, the specialists have proposed cracking 
			of ice under tidal stresses, or cracking of rocky surfaces by 
			meteoric impacts, or collapse of surface material above subterranean 
			flows of liquid, or venting of sub-surface gases. These diverse "explanations" 
			have been offered for essentially identical geologic formations. 
			 
			In the mid-1970’s, engineer Ralph Juergens described for the 
			first time the expected effects of interplanetary lightning on 
			the surfaces of solid bodies in space. His original insights are 
			particularly valuable in light of plasma cosmology, with its 
			emphasis on electricity in the evolution of stellar and planetary 
			systems. Juergens showed that the strange features of 
			sinuous rilles can be explained by scaling up features of 
			powerful lightning strikes on Earth. Interplanetary lightning 
			could act (with variations) on worlds that are hot or cold, on 
			worlds with high or low gravity, on worlds with or without an 
			atmosphere, and on worlds with or without water, lava, or other 
			liquids. 
			
				
				• Often a rille 
				begins or ends on a crater or has a crater straddling the rille 
				at the place where the rille changes direction. Hyginus rille 
				on the Moon is a good example. 
				 
				• Many craters are perched on the edges of rilles -- far in 
				excess of the random distribution predicted by orthodox impact 
				theory. 
				 
				• Sometimes craters are so densely distributed in and around 
				rilles that when scientists count the craters to estimate the 
				age of the surface their conclusion flatly contradicts the 
				claimed age of the rille itself. 
				 
				• Crater chains frequently run parallel to a rille, as near 
				Valles Marineris on Mars, or they can run 
				along the bottom of the rille for all or part of the rille's 
				length. 
				 
				• Sometimes the rille appears to be constituted of overlapping 
				craters, making clear that the force producing the craters was 
				the agent producing the rille. This apparently continuous 
				cratering will often give a clean "cookie cutter" or fluted 
				appearance to the walls of the channel with no evidence of the 
				slumping that would follow fluid undercutting.  
			 
			
			Experimental work is now 
			underway to explore the relationship between the electric arc and 
			scarring patterns in the solar system. Much more such research is 
			called for, but even the initial results, as they are published, 
			should be sufficient to provoke more vigorous laboratory work. 
			 
			The channel produced by an electric spark, such as the one shown 
			above, is a sinuous rille in miniature. Electrical phenomena are 
			scalable: they exhibit the same forms and characteristics whether 
			the discharge occurs over a fraction of a millimeter or over 
			thousands of kilometers. In fact, computerized simulations of 
			high-energy electrical discharges indicate that the same patterns 
			can be scaled up yet another 100 million times to galactic size. 
			 
			Scalability carries sweeping implications for planetary science. 
			With a microscope, industrial engineers observe the characteristic 
			features of rilles in the tiny scars that electric arcs leave on 
			damaged insulators and semiconductors or on the surfaces of 
			spark-machined tools. If interplanetary lightning caused the rilles 
			on space objects, then inexpensive and controlled experiments on 
			Earth may answer puzzles that have vexed planetary scientists for 
			decades. Present knowledge of electrical phenomena will also enable 
			scientists to calculate the energies involved in the formation of 
			rilles. How powerful is an interplanetary lightning bolt? Plasma 
			cosmologist Anthony Peratt estimates that a single such bolt would 
			be as powerful as 3000 100-megaton nuclear explosions. 
			 
			In the coming year, our “Pictures of the Day” will return to these 
			questions often. Active “volcanoes” on Jupiter’s moon
			Io and 
			Neptune’s moon Triton reveal the telltale signatures of 
			plasma 
			discharges. Enormous “dust devils” moving across the surface of 
			Mars, suggest similar phenomena at lower energies. The tracks of 
			these Everest-sized whirlwinds are eerily similar to the spidery 
			patterns of supposed “cracks” on Jupiter's moon Europa. In wildly 
			different contexts, we observe vast fields of parallel grooves, 
			flat-bottomed craters and crater chains; domes and blisters, all 
			explicable in fine detail as the scars of electric arcs. 
			 
			In surveying scientific opinion on unexpected planetary geology, we 
			have found that the "best scientific guesses" frequently ignore the 
			most telling features. Experts may be reluctant to concentrate on 
			anomalies to phenomena they claim to understand. In fact, the 
			astonishing surface relief has forced planetary scientists to 
			produce whole libraries of fragmentary and often-contradictory 
			“explanations”, none of which has withstood closer scrutiny. 
			 
			This is not, then, a mystery that can be resolved overnight. It 
			requires close examination of anomalous but recurring patterns. And 
			when it comes to the alien landscapes revealed in recent decades, it 
			is no exaggeration to say that every recurring pattern is an 
			anomaly.  
			
			  
			
			
			   
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