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7/21/2025, 12:09:53 AM
>>937372415
It's important to realize the instabilities that allow energy to be exchanged from the ionosphere to the surface are reliant on harmonic conditions of the entire atmosphere system. Lightning strikes occur at a predictable rate across the planet because the "echoes" of electromagnetic energy they send rippling through the atmosphere tend to be similar in amplitude.
This series of resonances where electromagnetic energy ripples through the atmosphere varies with altitude. This is known in modern science as the "Schumann resonances."
The instability of energy in the atmosphere does not just encompass electromagnetic waves. It also affects gravity and higher frequency radiation like gamma waves and charged particles. As a result, there are constant fluctuations in gravity that travel vertically through the air column. Again, all of these mechanisms can be observed in action each time lightning strikes the Earth. Aurora borealis is another symptom of high energy potential, and is fed by magnetic reconnections in near-Earth space. These reconnection points (or X-points as NASA calls them) form when the magnetic field of the sun temporarily combines with the Earth's magnetic field. This can happen multiple times per day as conditions allow.
When magnetic reconnection occurs, photons and plasma from the sun can travel deeper into the earth's atmosphere unobstructed. There are other effects too, such as production of very high energy particles more similar to those seen in the sun's corona within earth's magnetic field. Modern science has a limited understanding of this phenomenon.
It's important to realize the instabilities that allow energy to be exchanged from the ionosphere to the surface are reliant on harmonic conditions of the entire atmosphere system. Lightning strikes occur at a predictable rate across the planet because the "echoes" of electromagnetic energy they send rippling through the atmosphere tend to be similar in amplitude.
This series of resonances where electromagnetic energy ripples through the atmosphere varies with altitude. This is known in modern science as the "Schumann resonances."
The instability of energy in the atmosphere does not just encompass electromagnetic waves. It also affects gravity and higher frequency radiation like gamma waves and charged particles. As a result, there are constant fluctuations in gravity that travel vertically through the air column. Again, all of these mechanisms can be observed in action each time lightning strikes the Earth. Aurora borealis is another symptom of high energy potential, and is fed by magnetic reconnections in near-Earth space. These reconnection points (or X-points as NASA calls them) form when the magnetic field of the sun temporarily combines with the Earth's magnetic field. This can happen multiple times per day as conditions allow.
When magnetic reconnection occurs, photons and plasma from the sun can travel deeper into the earth's atmosphere unobstructed. There are other effects too, such as production of very high energy particles more similar to those seen in the sun's corona within earth's magnetic field. Modern science has a limited understanding of this phenomenon.
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