by Wal Thornhill
from
Holoscience Website
26 March 2005
A news item headlined “The Dragon Storm” appeared on the Cassini
mission website on February 24.
Saturn’s atmosphere and its rings are shown here in a false color
composite made from Cassini images taken in near infrared light
through filters that sense different amounts of methane gas.
Portions of the atmosphere with a large abundance of methane above
the clouds are red, indicating clouds that are deep in the
atmosphere. Grey indicates high clouds, and brown indicates clouds
at intermediate altitudes.
The complex feature with arms and secondary extensions just above
and to the right of center is called the Dragon Storm. It lies in a
region of the southern hemisphere referred to as "storm alley" by
imaging scientists because of the high level of storm activity
observed there by Cassini in the last year.
Image Preparation: John Barbara
Figure Caption: Andrew Ingersoll, Carolyn Porco
The imagery of the celestial dragon in this context is an
unconscious nod to an electrified universe. The new science of
plasma behavior emphasizes the dominant role of the electric force
and its powerful effects in the electrically charged matter that
makes up 99 percent of the universe. Plasma science is re-writing
the textbooks on galactic, stellar, and planetary evolution. And it
throws new interdisciplinary light on the ancient “doomsday” dramas
involving a celestial dragon and the “thunderbolt of the gods.” This
dragon storm on Saturn connects the modern science with the ancient
dramas.
A few thousand years ago, ancient artists around the world carved
similar complex images on stone. The meticulous research of plasma
scientist Anthony Peratt, a leading authority on the forms taken by
high-energy electrical discharges in plasma, has confirmed that
these images pictured heaven-spanning forms seen in the ancient sky.
Stories and rituals in all ancient cultures, memorializing a
catastrophe that involved heaven-shattering battles of planetary
“gods” and monsters, parallel these images. Most common is the story
of the fiery serpent or dragon attacking the world.
Such archetypal images seem to be burned into our collective
subconscious. For example, ringed planets often feature in a young
child’s primitive drawings about space. Yet they have no experience
of them. In the same way, scientists seem unconsciously to draw on
archetypes. And the results are often equally surprising.
The Electric Universe model may explain the connection between the
dragon of legend and the storm seen in this image. But first we
should hear what Cassini mission scientists had to say:
"A large, bright and complex convective storm that appeared in
Saturn’s southern hemisphere in mid-September 2004 was the key in
solving a long-standing mystery about the ringed planet. The Dragon
Storm was a powerful source of radio emissions during July and
September of 2004. The radio waves from the storm resemble the short
bursts of static generated by lightning on Earth. Cassini detected
the bursts only when the storm was rising over the horizon on the
night side of the planet as seen from the spacecraft; the bursts
stopped when the storm moved into sunlight. This on/off pattern
repeated for many Saturn rotations over a period of several weeks,
and it was the clock-like repeatability that indicated the storm and
the radio bursts are related. Scientists have concluded that
the
Dragon Storm is a giant thunderstorm whose precipitation generates
electricity as it does on Earth. The storm may be deriving its
energy from Saturn’s deep atmosphere.
One mystery is why the
radio bursts start while the Dragon Storm is
below the horizon on the night side and end when the storm is on the
day side, still in full view of the Cassini spacecraft. A possible
explanation is that the lightning source lies to the east of the
visible cloud, perhaps because it is deeper where the currents are
eastward relative to those at cloud top levels. If this were the
case, the lightning source would come up over the night side horizon
and would sink down below the day side horizon before the visible
cloud. This would explain the timing of the visible storm relative
to the radio bursts.
The Dragon Storm is of great interest for another reason. In
examining images taken of Saturn’s atmosphere over many months,
imaging scientists found that the Dragon Storm arose in the same
part of Saturn’s atmosphere that had earlier produced large bright
convective storms. In other words, the Dragon Storm appears to be a
long-lived storm deep in the atmosphere that periodically flares up
to produce dramatic bright white plumes which subside over time. One
earlier sighting, in July 2004, was also associated with strong
radio bursts. And another, observed in March 2004 and captured in a
movie created from images of the atmosphere (PIA06082 and PIA06083)
spawned three little dark oval storms that broke off from the arms
of the main storm. Two of these subsequently merged with each other;
the current to the north carried the third one off to the west, and
Cassini lost track of it. Small dark storms like these generally get
stretched out until they merge with the opposing currents to the
north and south.
These little storms are the food that sustains the larger
atmospheric features, including the larger ovals and the eastward
and westward currents. If the little storms come from the giant
thunderstorms, then together they form a food chain that harvests
the energy of the deep atmosphere and helps maintain the powerful
currents.
Cassini has many more chances to observe future flare-ups of the
Dragon Storm, and others like it over the course of the mission. It
is likely that scientists will come to solve the mystery of the
radio bursts and observe storm creation and merging in the next 2 or
3 years."
Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute
Calling the dragon storm “a giant thunderstorm whose precipitation
generates electricity as it does on Earth” explains nothing. The
generation of lightning on Earth remains a mystery to
meteorologists. It is thought to derive from vertical movement of
droplets in a thundercloud “in a way or ways not yet fully
understood” [Lightning, Martin A. Uman, Dover Publications]. Hence
the notion that “the storm may be deriving its energy from Saturn’s
deep atmosphere.” As discussed elsewhere on this website,
thunderstorms are electric discharge phenomena driven by the
circuits that link planets to stars and stars to the galaxy. The
electrical effects at Saturn have already been outlined in an
earlier Electric Universe news item.
The report does not discuss the complex shape of the dragon storm.
But that shape indicates an external origin of electrical power.
Similar forms occur in plasma instabilities when an intense beam of
electrons strikes a “witness plate.”
Credits: LH image H. Davis, RH image H. F. Webster. From Physics
of the Plasma Universe by Anthony Peratt, Springer-Verlag 1992.
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These two images
(right)
show in cross-section what happens to a beam of
electrons that is following an axial magnetic field. The image on
the left is due to a 90 kiloamp current striking a carbon witness
plate. The other image is due to a 58 microamp current striking a
fluorescent screen. So in the laboratory the effect is scaleable
over 12 orders of magnitude of beam current!
The same effect occurs in the Birkeland currents that drive the
aurora on Earth and is responsible for the undulating auroral
curtains. Scaling up from the size of Earth’s auroras to the storm
on Saturn is no problem. The two prominent “spiral galaxy”
formations in the dragon storm are likely the effects of the
interaction of Birkeland current pairs. In other words, plasma
phenomena may be scaled up from the laboratory to planetary, and
even to galactic, dimensions.
Like Jupiter’s Great Red Spot, the dragon storm on Saturn seems to
be a long-lived storm center that occasionally flares up. The
clock-like regularity of the radio emissions from storms on Saturn
is used to judge the great planet’s actual rotation rate beneath the
clouds. But this behavior is enigmatic. Why should an electrical
storm attach itself to a particular spot on a planet’s surface,
particularly when that surface is thought to be liquid?
The Electric Universe model of stars and planets provides the
possibility of a solid surface on the giant planets. And as we find
on Earth, a solid surface allows for regional electrical differences
that favor electrical storm activity in one region over another. A
good example is “tornado alley” in the southern U.S.A.
The Electric Universe accepts the plasma cosmology version of star
formation, which postulates that a star is formed in a “z-pinch” in
a galactic electric discharge. It is a model that can be shown
experimentally to work. In contrast, the gravity cosmology version,
which postulates that a star is formed by the collapse of a cloud of
gas, cannot be demonstrated experimentally nor can a collapsing
cloud be identified observationally. Furthermore, this “nebular
theory” is beset with theoretical contradictions of angular momentum
and magnetic field distribution.
In the Electric Universe, stars do not “consume themselves” to fuel
their radiant output. The same galactic currents that formed them
remain to light them. This means that stars are born electron
deficient with respect to their galactic environment. It also means
that galaxies be born similarly electron deficient with respect to
their environment. It is the slow galactic charging process that
maintains the steady glow of their countless starry electric lights.
Early in the Twentieth Century astronomers dismissed the notion of
an external power source for stars because they thought a star would
swiftly collapse under its own weight unless there was a central
source of radiation pressure to prevent it. But this argument fails
if charge separation occurs in massive bodies. This possibility of
charge separation was considered, but it was discarded by arguing,
using the ideal gas laws, that the light electrons would not rise to
the top to any significant degree in a hydrogen atmosphere.
This is a prime example of an inappropriate model rendering all
further theorizing worthless. The physicists would have been well
advised to look to the chemists for a better model – one in which
the electric dipole force between atoms and molecules plays a
dominant role. Because the atoms in a strong gravitational field
will be distorted, the heavy positively charged nucleus will be
offset from the center of the atom toward the center of the star.
The result is that each neutral atom becomes a small radial electric
dipole. The effect on free electrons is to cause them to drift
toward the surface, leaving positively charged ions behind in the
interior. The repulsive forces among these positively charged ions
prevent the gravitational collapse of the star.
Furthermore, the visible “surface" of a star, or photosphere, is an
electric discharge phenomenon and therefore not controlled by
gravity. The standard model of stars assumes that gravity and
radiation pressure determine the size of a star. That is not so in
the electrical model. So conventional calculations of the density of
stars and their internal composition have no real meaning.
But there is more. Physicists assume that Newton’s law of gravity
has a “universal” gravitational constant, “G,” which is the same for
all bodies in the universe. But “G” is the most elusive constant in
physics. It seems to be different every time the same apparatus
measures it on Earth. The Electric Universe takes a different view.
“G” depends on the internal electric stress of the body and is
different for every body in the universe. This effect can be seen in
particle accelerators where matter apparently gains in mass in
response to the amount of electrical stress that is applied to it.
So deducing the composition and structure of stars and planets by
measuring their gravitational fields and assuming “G” to be a fixed
value will give misleading results. Conventional models assume
planets are accreted from a hypothetical primordial solar nebula.
They also assume that hydrogen is compressed to a metallic state in
the cores of gas giants. These assumptions too are invalid in an
Electric Universe.
Planets are “born” fully formed from larger bodies. They are not
accreted. The process of having planetary “children” is that of
electrical expulsion of a part of the positively charged matter from
beneath the surface of a disturbed star or gas giant. That is why
the gas giants have satellite systems that are like miniature solar
systems. The British physicist Peter Warlow was moved to write:
“All
of the existing theories of planet formation have taken material
from the surface of the Sun or from a cloud of dust outside the Sun
in order to form the planets, for the ‘obvious’ reason that planets
are on the outside of the Sun. We humans, equally ‘obviously,’ are
outside our mothers – yet we did not start there.”
[The Reversing
Earth, 1982].
Some measure of the internal composition of stars can be seen in
their “children” – the gas giants. But all we can see and measure is
their upper atmospheres and clouds. To delve deeper we need to look
at the “children” of gas giants – the rocky planets and moons.
Clearly, each planet and moon may have a complex history. All were
not formed at about the same time in a single event. And the larger
bodies must have evolved discontinuously with each birth. So it was
with Saturn!
The ancients knew Saturn as “the Sun of night.” The archaic words we
now associate with the Sun—Ra, Helios,
Shamash, etc.—originally
referred to Saturn. Saturn’s core is still hot (Saturn radiates more
than twice the energy that it receives from the Sun) because of
Saturn’s recent history as a radiant body. This suggests that
beneath Saturn’s clouds is a large, hot, solid body practically
indistinguishable in composition and physical state from Venus or
Earth. Its positively charged core prevents hydrogen from being
compressed to the metallic state. With a solid core and having
“given birth” fairly recently – as evidenced by the ephemeral icy
rings – Saturn probably still bears the birth scar, hidden beneath
the clouds. We might expect some preference for continued electric
discharge from that scarred region.
Saturn is the most oblate planet in the solar system. Its equatorial
winds are four times faster and the “jets” twice as wide as
Jupiter’s. These factors suggest an atmosphere of great depth. This
may explain why the radio noise associated with the dragon storm
seems to precede the storm. The tornadic discharge to the surface of
Saturn must be skewed over a considerable distance by the high-speed
winds and great depth of the atmosphere. Only the powerful
electromagnetic forces that control a tornadic discharge could
maintain the integrity of the discharge column under the onslaught
of tremendous vertical wind shear. (The winds in the upper
atmosphere have been estimated to exceed 1000 mph.)
The Electric Universe model provides a connection between
the dragon
of legend and the storm seen in the Cassini image. The model was
built, not from theoretical considerations alone but from an
interdisciplinary inquiry into the images of planets (represented as
disks) and cosmic plasma phenomena that our ancestors felt were so
important to remember. They chiseled millions of uniquely
diagnostic patterns, known as petroglyphs, into solid rock. But with
the context long gone, these petroglyphs have become a mere
curiosity.
Meanwhile the physical clue for an intimate relationship in the past
between Saturn, Mars and Earth lies in their similar axial tilts of
26˚, 24˚ and 23˚. The axis of a rapidly spinning planet has a
gyroscopic stability that resists change due to external forces. The
normal result of disturbance is merely to cause the axis to slowly precess.
The first civilizations sprang up in reaction to the dramatic
prehistoric events. The activities of those civilizations—their
organization, art, architecture and rituals—were directed toward the
memorialization of the former celestial drama. It is there we first
meet the inexplicable, capricious planetary gods and the
world-threatening, fire-breathing celestial dragon or serpent. So it
is fitting that scientists today should unconsciously associate the
dragon image with a powerful plasma discharge on Saturn. However,
the connection will only become consciously apparent when the
electrical nature of the universe is acknowledged. Only then may
scientists solve the mysteries of Saturn’s dragon storm.
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