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03/30/2007 01:16:08 PM · #26 |
I think this link has been remarkably overlooked in this discussion.
It seems to present a completely normal and reproducible physical phenomenon, which can be logically extrapolated (scaled up) to explain what detail we can discern from a few hundred million miles away.
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03/30/2007 01:24:35 PM · #27 |
Originally posted by Strikeslip: I was thinking shrinkage crack of a material with an anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility "A", infilled by a material with a different anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility. The differing magnetisms somehow controlling the gases. |
Check out these recent pictures of gases following lines of magnetic force around a sunspot |
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03/30/2007 01:25:59 PM · #28 |
Originally posted by GeneralE: ...physical phenomenon, which can be logically extrapolated (scaled up).... |
Fractals, very neat way to extrapolate. Sometimes you can look at the deformation in a hand sample of rock and see the same features on a regional scale!
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03/30/2007 01:27:05 PM · #29 |
Originally posted by GeneralE: Originally posted by Strikeslip: I was thinking shrinkage crack of a material with an anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility "A", infilled by a material with a different anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility. The differing magnetisms somehow controlling the gases. |
Check out these recent pictures of gases following lines of magnetic force around a sunspot |
Coolio! Though I think they're discounting aurora on Saturn as a cause. So that chucks my magnetic theory anyway. :-/
Message edited by author 2007-03-30 13:30:10.
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