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Scientists finally admit plasma is responsible for magnetic fields in space!
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[quote:Plasmare:MV8xNzY1ODU4XzI5NDQyODU0XzY5RkNDRkVE] [quote:Anonymous Coward 5916429:MV8xNzY1ODU4XzI5NDQyNTYyX0EzNkFBQTQ4] Plasmare ~ these are the clues I keep getting. Please try to put these into myth: snake as kundalini energy of the earth and the human, and what you said above. plasma as the great connector. cell intelligence, especially blood cells - plasma. iron, both earth and blood. oxygen. timing. the sun, both sol and our internal sun or "compass" core. please add the clues you have. what do all these add up to? peace to you. [/quote] The term plasma comes from blood plasma, because of the life like properties of plasma coined by Irving Langmuir "[i]He was one of the first scientists to work with plasmas and was the first to call these ionized gases by that name, because they reminded him of blood plasma.[/i]" [i]Plasma is essentially the fourth state of matter beyond solid, liquid and gas, in which electrons are torn from atoms leaving behind a miasma of charged particles. Until now, physicists assumed that there could be little organisation in such a cloud of particles. However, Tsytovich and his colleagues demonstrated, using a computer model of molecular dynamics, that particles in a plasma can undergo self-organization as electronic charges become separated and the plasma becomes polarized. This effect results in microscopic strands of solid particles that twist into corkscrew shapes, or helical structures. These helical strands are themselves electronically charged and are attracted to each other. [b]Quite bizarrely, not only do these helical strands interact in a counterintuitive way in which like can attract like, but they also undergo changes that are normally associated with biological molecules, such as DNA and proteins, say the researchers. They can, for instance, divide, or bifurcate, to form two copies of the original structure. These new structures can also interact to induce changes in their neighbours and they can even evolve into yet more structures as less stable ones break down, leaving behind only the fittest structures in the plasma.[/b] So, could helical clusters formed from interstellar dust be somehow alive? [b]"These complex, self-organized plasma structures exhibit all the necessary properties to qualify them as candidates for inorganic living matter," says Tsytovich, "they are autonomous, they reproduce and they evolve".[/b] He adds that the plasma conditions needed to form these helical structures are common in outer space. However, plasmas can also form under more down to earth conditions such as the point of a lightning strike. The researchers hint that perhaps an inorganic form of life emerged on the primordial earth, which then acted as the template for the more familiar organic molecules we know today.[/i] http://www.physorg.com/news105869123.html Any element can be a plasma since it is a state of matter. The Earth's core is a plasma, lava is plasma... Basically anything that naturally glows (emits EM radiation) is in a state of plasma. But plasma can also be invisible like the magnetosphere and the plasma in space, where it stays in "dark mode" or it can cause electrical discharges like lightning or sparks. The discharge is also a plasma, but it lasts momentarily. There are simply too many myths and legends and rock carvings etc, which all show some aspect of our scientific discoveries. We just understand it better now than they did back then, they had to explain what they experienced and saw in a way that they knew how. It's like a child trying to explain an aurora to you but they have never seen the phenomena before or know anything about it so they would use words and meanings they know to try to explain it as best they can. Not going to tell you how to think. Think for yourself. [/quote]
Original Message
Discovered by a German astronomer in 1950, the Biermann process predicts that a magnetic field can spring up spontaneously from nothing more than the m
otion of charged particles. Plasma, or charged particle gas, is abundant in space.
Scientists believe that large clouds of gas collapsing into galaxies sent elliptically shaped bubbles of shockwaves through the early universe, touching off flows of electric current in the plasma of the intergalactic medium.
Anyone who has built an electromagnet in middle school science class is familiar with this concept, Drake said.
"If you can make current flow, you make a magnetic field," Drake said.
The question in astrophysics was what could have generated the current. This experiment demonstrated that such asymmetrical shockwaves could do the job.
[
link to www.physorg.com
]
It's about time they began to take plasma cosmology seriously and stop believing in the creation myth that is the standard theory of the big bang.
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