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Does water come from supernovae too?? Any reason why is couldn't? This recent BBC4 programme 'Asteroids: The Good The bad & The Ugly' doesn't go far enough in breaking the mould imo. Interesting none the less, see if you can see where exotic dark matter comets and water/ice could fit into the new data.

[quote]Famed for their ability to inflict Armageddon from outer space, asteroids are now revealing the secrets of how they are responsible for both life and death on our planet.[end quote]

13 days later
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OMG - Comet Lovejoy Makes It!

[quote]COMET LOVEJOY SURVIVES: Incredibly, sungrazing Comet Lovejoy survived its close encounter with the sun yesterday. Lovejoy flew only 140,000 km over the stellar surface during the early hours of Dec. 16th. Experts expected the icy sundiver to be destroyed. Instead, NASAs Solar Dynamics Observatory caught the comet emerging from perihelion (closest approach) apparently intact [end quote]

Yet another matter/gravity anomaly. The exotic dark matter core hypothesis fits the video evidence.

7 days later

Horizon, BBC4 8pm, Thursday 23 Feb 2012.

Q: Why Can't We make A Star On Earth?

A: Because our modelling of nuclear fusion is woefully inadequate.

Professor Cox battles with the simplicities of life and gives a good tv performance as usual. His programmes have become rather 'samey' and keep repeating the basic assumptions and knowledge that modern science is bound within. The drawing of a proton changing to a neutron is just *too* basic! We need a simulation model of the exact mechanics of matter, radiaion and force. Another level of understanding is yet required. Just relying on the antiquated notion of 'maths' is now becoming laughable..

8 days later
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Helical-shaped radio waves are a step closer to the real world geometry of matter and radiation imv.

[quote]Radio waves normally propogate through the air in a pattern similar to waves rippling toward. But researchers have found a way to twisting radio waves into a spiral shape, which could them to cram more data into the signal. Not only that, but understanding the characteristics of these waves could shed light on powerful phenomena in space.

Bo Thide of the Swedish Institute of Space Physics in Uppsala and Fabrizio Tamburini of the University of Padua led a team that found a way to transmit radio waves in a helical, twisted pattern. Further, they did it in a real-world environment and at frequencies commonly used by Wi-Fi networks. The results appeared in The New Journal of Physics.[end quote]Attachment #1: spiral_radio_waves.jpg

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Scandinavian trees 'survived last Ice Age'. The conditions of the Arctic during the last ice age hint at a warm current entering the basin imv. It's not the first time that controversy over long held beliefs of the arctic climate has surfaced. This extra current strength fits with the extra tidal forces predicted in an exotic dark matter universe.

22 days later

Moon's Creation Questioned by Chemistry. This latest study fits with the idea of an Exotic Dark Matter Universe imv. An exotic dark matter 'comet' which went through the proto-earth and emerged to form the Himalayas as well as our Moon seems to fit the data rather well, doesn't it?

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My latest thoughts:

The mechanism of the millenial cycle might be the 'fog effect'. An increase in tidal strength would bring warmer water further towards the poles. A decrease in tidal strength would leave the oceans of mid latitude much colder. Warm air pushed over this colder ocean would produce much more fog. This could be a critical factor and significantly contribute to the 'fog albedo effect' or 'fog factor'. A cooling which leads to a further cooling effect.

19 days later

Himalayan glaciers growing despite global warming. [quote]Despite talk of global warming and melting ice sheets the Himalayan glaciers appear to be growing.

Over a nine year period French scientists created 3D maps of one part of the Himalayas which showed that while glaciers around the world are reported to be shrinking in size, these appear to be getting larger. The findings continue to fuel controversy over the true impact of climate change. "In our warming world, there are regions of the Earth where, for a few years or decades, the atmosphere is not warming or is even cooling," said project leader Julie Gardelle. "So it is not really a big surprise that there are some regions where the temperature is not rising and the Karakoram may be one of those."

In the Karakoram mountain range on the border of Pakistan and China, glaciers have defied global warming to become marginally larger over a decade, researchers said.[/quote]

This fits with the millennnial tidal model of the moon which is moving away from us and dcreasing the strength of the ocean currents, so counteracting anthropgenic warming in the mid latitudes.Attachment #1: Karakoramglacier.jpg

10 days later
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I just watched the BBC2 Horizon programme on solar storms and it's 'mega-magnetic equatorial sunspots'. My first thought was supermagnetic material in phase with planetary supermagnetism as discussed above. When a common sense non-Newtonian anisotropic picture of matter and gravity is used, it solves every problem we have with ease.

Space storm on the Sun's surface

14 days later
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What greater appreciation of Archimedes and the idea of a mechanical universe than the Antikythera Mechanism?

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