The Age of Venus & Its lack of a Magnetic Field

Historic planetary instability and catastrophe. Evidence for electrical scarring on planets and moons. Electrical events in today's solar system. Electric Earth.

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nick c
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Re: The Age of Venus & Its lack of a Magnetic Field

Unread post by nick c » Mon Aug 26, 2019 8:40 am

ja7tdo,

Your personal (non EU) theorizing should not be posted on the "Electric Universe" or "Planetary Science" boards. It is an invitation for other forum members to respond to your post and that would only serve to divert the topic from an EU focus.

Many here have their own personal views and theories which may or may not be consistent with the Thunderbolts Project, and they are more than welcome to post those ideas and theorizing on the NIAMI board. There the discussion can be totally devoted to the pros and cons of the particular theory.
Please read the last post in the Rules and Guidelines thread here:
http://www.thunderbolts.info/wp/forum/phpB ... p?f=11&t=4

johnm33
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Re: The Age of Venus & Its lack of a Magnetic Field

Unread post by johnm33 » Sun Sep 08, 2019 8:26 am

Webbman wrote:perhaps not every planet born is full of iron, nickel and cobalt.
I'm assuming that that most planets began as the cores of stars, and that once a star encounters a more powerfully charged star the solid ionised/electron depleted core is slowed vastly more than the electrically active fluid/plasma exterior, and thus breaks out. Jupiter has a less dense core than expected NASA has their view, https://phys.org/news/2019-08-young-jup ... ssive.html [courtesy Lloyd elsewhere] , mine would be that it recently lost it's core and a new one is forming with a very different spread of elements. Depending on it's speed of approach, and it's possible Jupiter came in from 'our' south, previously belonging to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sagittari ... dal_Galaxy , with enough inertia to disrupt the whole previous planetary order, causing existing gas giants/captured stars to shed their 'new' cores as moons these cores being of differing generations. Though it's beyond my ability to deduce if Venus rotates with a spin compatible with the polar orbit of the dwarf galaxy, and other views are available http://viewzone.com/milkyway.html
It may be the case that when Jupiter+Venus was captured and the planets realigned with the new EM field into their present orbits that the slowing of a previous companion planet was decelerated to the point where it exploded due to the translation of it's kinetic energy into heat catalysing exothermic reactions giving us the asteroid belt.

ja7tdo
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Re: The Age of Venus & Its lack of a Magnetic Field

Unread post by ja7tdo » Sun Sep 08, 2019 6:47 pm

nick c wrote:ja7tdo,

Your personal (non EU) theorizing should not be posted on the "Electric Universe" or "Planetary Science" boards. It is an invitation for other forum members to respond to your post and that would only serve to divert the topic from an EU focus.

Many here have their own personal views and theories which may or may not be consistent with the Thunderbolts Project, and they are more than welcome to post those ideas and theorizing on the NIAMI board. There the discussion can be totally devoted to the pros and cons of the particular theory.
Please read the last post in the Rules and Guidelines thread here:
http://www.thunderbolts.info/wp/forum/phpB ... p?f=11&t=4
EU is not perfect theory. What you are saying is the same as mainstream science.

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nick c
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Re: The Age of Venus & Its lack of a Magnetic Field

Unread post by nick c » Mon Sep 09, 2019 12:08 pm

ja7tdo wrote:EU is not perfect theory. What you are saying is the same as mainstream science.
Is there something that you do not understand about the forum Rules and Guidelines?
If so, contact me through a PM.

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