Star Birth

Plasma and electricity in space. Failure of gravity-only cosmology. Exposing the myths of dark matter, dark energy, black holes, neutron stars, and other mathematical constructs. The electric model of stars. Predictions and confirmations of the electric comet.

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D_Archer
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Star Birth

Unread post by D_Archer » Thu Jan 24, 2019 7:28 am

Hi,

I wanted to gel with the thunderbolts forum peeps to check what the general current view is on star birth.

Wal has been pointing things out in recent space news episodes and there are confusing (different) ideas on what exactly happens during star birth.

I propose that in a z-pinch, or star forming filament, only 1 star is born (per pinch). But when astronomers observe (as Wal also pointed out) a birth they see usually 2 stars, an archetypical example is R Aquarii*, where mainstream proposes a red giant and white dwarf, the white dwarf feeding on the red giant. I have no idea why/how they arrive at such a concept, that view looks nothing like the actual observation.

in EU the pinch is 2 umbrella's (as Don Scott said), the classic hour glass shape, all star births have this shape (every planetay nebula so far observed is probably a star birth), the larger structure is the star forming filament, the pinch is embedded in this larger filament. With EU we see 2 plasmoids swirling around each other, the magnetic pinch (imho) should produce 1 star when the pinch subsides, but Wal says that 2 stars could form, or 1 star and 1 planet, i think Wal also said , 1 star (or more) in parts of the filament and along the filament also planets if not enough material for a star. Any other ideas?

*Image

And also maybe we need better and more descriptions of the z-pinch process, from start to finisch, there are certain energetic phases and quiet phases.. EU should build a model of a complete z-pinch event, and how can we test this in the laboratory, i think an experiment setup that produces a pinch in an dusty/gassy chamber should be possible. Put some high speed camera's to witness the pinch and we can have the complete picture in seconds...

Regards,
Daniel
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Zyxzevn
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Re: Star Birth

Unread post by Zyxzevn » Thu Jan 24, 2019 5:43 pm

First we need a good electric model:
I think that a lot of the Magnetic fields that are mentioned in mainstream science journals
is actually electric fields. That is because mainstream does not consider electric fields at all.

And with electric fields, we have a much easier physical model.

1. Charge
We already start with a separated charges.
Charges can cause attraction inside dusts and gas.
This way we get clusters of matter.

2. Current
And if separate charges discharge, we get an electric current.
The electric current creates magnetic fields.
Both create more attraction.
Magnetic fields attracts paramagnetic matter (like oxygen) and ferromagnetic matter (iron).
The currents cause matter to flow in a small channel through space.

The currents also cause ionisation and double layers.
The currents follow ions and conductive matter that is already there.
This increases the concentration of matter even more.

3. Chemical reactions
The concentration of matter causes all kinds of chemical reactions.
Iron oxidizes. Oxygen with hydrogen forms water.
Crystals will be forming.
While this stops the currents through the matter, the currents will
likely go just around the matter.
This again increases the concentration.

4. Changing currents
The rise and fall of this current can cause additional currents, due to
rot(E)= -c*dB/dt
This can sometimes happen in oscillating systems.

5. Van-der-waals attraction.
Water and other matter can attract each other via
their dielectric properties.
With water or carbon-dioxide we get clouds and ice.

6. Gravity
When there is enough matter, the gravity will start to become more important.
This causes more matter to concentrate together.
Due to the electromagnetism, this will form disks and rings.

7. Nuclear reactions
When enough matter is concentrated, and probably with the help of electric currents,
nuclear reactions will start.
I think this will cause new charge-separation (like an EMP-bomb)
and this cycle can start again.
Now we have a star.

8 Now the Z-pinch.
When a current initiates a nuclear reaction, we get charge separation.
The star/gas-blob starts to eject charged matter.
This creates its own current.
Due to the already present magnetic field, this is into 2 directions.
That is because the currents try to avoid any magnetic field.
So it stays close together with the currents that are already present.
Currents cause more magnetic fields and new nuclear reactions.

9. Collapse into star
This goes on until the magnetic fields are unstable and the structure
can no longer eject charged particles into only one direction.
Now the star starts to eject charged particles into all directions.

10. Laboratory experiment
Start nuclear reaction using a current.
Test how the nuclear energy is converted into electric energy.

11. Make your own fusion reactor.

12. Get visited by aliens due to radiation complaints
:mrgreen: :mrgreen: :mrgreen: :mrgreen: :mrgreen:
More ** from zyxzevn at: Paradigm change and C@

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D_Archer
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Re: Star Birth

Unread post by D_Archer » Fri Jan 25, 2019 2:53 am

Zyxzevn wrote:...snip...10. Laboratory experiment
Start nuclear reaction using a current.
Test how the nuclear energy is converted into electric energy.

11. Make your own fusion reactor.

12. Get visited by aliens due to radiation complaints
:mrgreen: :mrgreen: :mrgreen: :mrgreen: :mrgreen:
Thanks for all of that, yes you describe some of the phases where during the formation process at certain times there are jets etc, i saw a picture of a timeline for R Aquarii but can not find it anymore, where they tracked outburst and jets in time.

About 10, i do not think a nuclear reaction is needed, setting up an e-field and overload it with charge (photons) shoould be sufficient to initiate a spark (breakdown), that may resemble a z-pinch.

What about the end result, 1 star or.....

Regards,
Daniel
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Sithri
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Re: Star Birth

Unread post by Sithri » Sun Jan 27, 2019 8:48 am

So, is it true that double layers form birkeland filaments? I'm asking this question because it is a prediction of the Egyptian Book of the Dead in my own translation of it.

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Re: Star Birth

Unread post by Zyxzevn » Sun Jan 27, 2019 2:51 pm

Sithri wrote:So, is it true that double layers form birkeland filaments? I'm asking this question because it is a prediction of the Egyptian Book of the Dead in my own translation of it.
Logically the reverse would be true.
In experiments, the double layers are the result of a current through plasma, like a Birkeland current.

The Egyptian Books are more related the the spiritual realm. Better do not mix them up.
More ** from zyxzevn at: Paradigm change and C@

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Re: Star Birth

Unread post by Sithri » Sun Jan 27, 2019 4:30 pm

Zyxzevn wrote:
Sithri wrote:So, is it true that double layers form birkeland filaments? I'm asking this question because it is a prediction of the Egyptian Book of the Dead in my own translation of it.
Logically the reverse would be true.
In experiments, the double layers are the result of a current through plasma, like a Birkeland current.

The Egyptian Books are more related the the spiritual realm. Better do not mix them up.
So, double layers do not twist to form birkeland filaments? Like two double layers meeting and then twisting upon each other? Birkeland filaments form z-pinches which form stars. Maybe my translation is a bit off, because there's one hieroglyph that I am not completely sure of its meaning. The closest I can get to it is 'waters (plasma) divided.' Maybe it means connected? The hieroglyph itself is water on the top with multiple lines slanting going down to a snubbed surface. The snubbed surface is hieroglyph Aa15 in Gardiner's Sign List and the water is N35.

The Egyptian Book of the Dead is about the Stars and Zodiac and the holiness thereof. Ever seen the movie 'Stargate'? The Egyptians were known as MItsrayim, which is derived from the word Mazzaroth, which means Zodiac. So the Egyptians were literally 'people of the zodiac.' My translation uses Biblical Hebrew and Ancient Hebrew to derive Ancient Egyptian from it, which the Exodus, even if not occurring as the bible states with miracles, was a major mass-immigration of peoples from Egypt to Canaan. Ancient Egyptian became Ancient Hebrew, then Phoenician, and then Greek, which proves this.

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Re: Star Birth

Unread post by Zyxzevn » Sun Jan 27, 2019 5:26 pm

Sithri wrote: The closest I can get to it is 'waters (plasma) divided.' Maybe it means connected?
If you look at the milky-way it looks like a cloud or even a river.
So I think the sentence means that a cloud or river connect the stars.
More ** from zyxzevn at: Paradigm change and C@

Sithri
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Re: Star Birth

Unread post by Sithri » Mon Jan 28, 2019 12:48 pm

Zyxzevn wrote:
Sithri wrote: The closest I can get to it is 'waters (plasma) divided.' Maybe it means connected?
If you look at the milky-way it looks like a cloud or even a river.
So I think the sentence means that a cloud or river connect the stars.
I don't think so. Primarily I use the Aa15 is used as a divisor while N35 is used as 'waters of outer space' or simply and vaguely, 'multitudes'. If I were to translate this as charge separation, it would work. However excuse my unfamiliarity with the EU as I don't know if charge separation would work in forming birkeland filaments, although it may be useful in forming a binary star. I'm trying to predict what would happen in a formation of a binary star, as I am translating the text and it should describe what happens in this instance without me having foreknowledge of the EU, which would taint my interpretation of the text.

Do you think that any of you can give me the steps to the formation of a binary star in the EU? It most likely has charge separation or some kind of insulation of one star from the other which allows both to form as a binary system. This is what I am concerned about.

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Re: Star Birth

Unread post by D_Archer » Mon Jan 28, 2019 12:56 pm

Sithri wrote:
Zyxzevn wrote:
Sithri wrote: The closest I can get to it is 'waters (plasma) divided.' Maybe it means connected?
If you look at the milky-way it looks like a cloud or even a river.
So I think the sentence means that a cloud or river connect the stars.
I don't think so. Primarily I use the Aa15 is used as a divisor while N35 is used as 'waters of outer space' or simply and vaguely, 'multitudes'. If I were to translate this as charge separation, it would work. However excuse my unfamiliarity with the EU as I don't know if charge separation would work in forming birkeland filaments, although it may be useful in forming a binary star. I'm trying to predict what would happen in a formation of a binary star, as I am translating the text and it should describe what happens in this instance without me having foreknowledge of the EU, which would taint my interpretation of the text.

Do you think that any of you can give me the steps to the formation of a binary star in the EU? It most likely has charge separation or some kind of insulation of one star from the other which allows both to form as a binary system. This is what I am concerned about.
Well that is the question, are binary stars born in a z-pinch, i think during formation we can see 2 plasmoids, but after the pinch subsides i would bet 1 star remains, this is because you see 2 only because of high incoming charge (photons), ions, electrons, the through charge (from pole to pole) is so immense the plasma does not yet combine,
but swirls around each other, once the pinch subsides i think the plasma matter will join to become 1 star.

But i started the thread to find a physical explanation and ideas from other people, please keep myth out of this, maybe you can start a thread about that on NIAMI.

Regards,
Daniel
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Brigit Bara
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Re: Star Birth

Unread post by Brigit Bara » Mon Jan 28, 2019 1:38 pm

by D_Archer » Thu Jan 24, 2019 7:28 am
"I propose that in a z-pinch, or star forming filament, only 1 star is born (per pinch)...."

This passage from Wal Thornhill's website comes to hand. This was written in 2008; later observations of the consistent width of electrical filaments, strung with new stars, verified that new stars are formed along the electric discharges in dusty regions in space. Then the process continues with electrical fission of new stars:
"...[P]lasma experiments show that big objects (stars) are formed very efficiently in a cosmic lightning bolt in a dusty nebula — rather like bead lightning where the discharge pinches off to form a string of bright plasma spheres. Once formed, the stars “scatter like buckshot” and each star may fission to achieve electrical stability. This explains why about three quarters of stars have partners. That figure would be higher if we were to include gas giant partners.

The ELECTRIC UNIVERSE® ‘starts with something big and breaks it into pieces.’ The fission process is repeated in further electrical disturbances by flaring red dwarfs and gas giant planets ejecting rocky and icy planets, moons, comets, asteroids and meteorites. Planetary systems may also be acquired over time by electrical capture of independent interstellar bodies such as dim brown dwarf stars. That seems the best explanation for our ‘fruit salad’ of a solar system. Capture of a brown dwarf requires that the dim star accommodate to a new electrical environment within the plasma sheath of the Sun. The brown dwarf flares and ejects matter, which becomes planets, moons and smaller debris. The ‘dead’ dwarf star becomes a gas giant planet.
This is not the 4.5 billion year evolutionary story of the clockwork solar system taught to us in Astronomy I. There is no primordial nebular ‘stuff’ of which all objects in the solar system were formed at the one time. The ‘stuff’ of which stars are made has been differentiated and altered by plasma discharge processes. All stars produce heavy elements in their photospheric discharges, which alters their internal composition with time. And the ‘stuff’ expelled electrically from inside stars and gas giants is further modified elementally, chemically and isotopically.
Meteorites bear witness to this process in their isotopic anomalies and the myriad tiny glass spheres found in most of them — attributed by more than one brave astronomer to ‘lightning’ in the solar nebula. The production of heavy radioactive elements in situ by ‘cosmic thunderbolts’ renders standard geological dating techniques useless for establishing ages. Other distinctions of the ELECTRIC UNIVERSE® model are so stark as to provide simple observational tests to eliminate one or the other model. Saturn’s moon, Enceladus, provides another opportunity."
ref:
http://www.holoscience.com/wp/enceladus ... ric-moons/
“Oh for shame, how these mortals put the blame upon us gods, for they say evils come from us, when it is they rather who by their own recklessness win sorrow beyond what is given…”
~Homer

Sithri
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Re: Star Birth

Unread post by Sithri » Mon Jan 28, 2019 1:40 pm

D_Archer wrote: Well that is the question, are binary stars born in a z-pinch, i think during formation we can see 2 plasmoids, but after the pinch subsides i would bet 1 star remains, this is because you see 2 only because of high incoming charge (photons), ions, electrons, the through charge (from pole to pole) is so immense the plasma does not yet combine,
but swirls around each other, once the pinch subsides i think the plasma matter will join to become 1 star.

But i started the thread to find a physical explanation and ideas from other people, please keep myth out of this, maybe you can start a thread about that on NIAMI.

Regards,
Daniel
It's pretty obvious that binary stars are not single stars and do not collide with one another. Sirius is a pertinent example. I'm interested in how a binary star forms. That's good enough for this thread,right? It is called 'Star Birth'.

Sithri
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Re: Star Birth

Unread post by Sithri » Mon Jan 28, 2019 1:45 pm

Brigit Bara wrote:by D_Archer » Thu Jan 24, 2019 7:28 am
"I propose that in a z-pinch, or star forming filament, only 1 star is born (per pinch)...."

This passage from Wal Thornhill's website comes to hand. This was written in 2008; later observations of the consistent width of electrical filaments, strung with new stars, verified that new stars are formed along the electric discharges in dusty regions in space. Then the process continues with electrical fission of new stars:
"...[P]lasma experiments show that big objects (stars) are formed very efficiently in a cosmic lightning bolt in a dusty nebula — rather like bead lightning where the discharge pinches off to form a string of bright plasma spheres. Once formed, the stars “scatter like buckshot” and each star may fission to achieve electrical stability. This explains why about three quarters of stars have partners. That figure would be higher if we were to include gas giant partners.

The ELECTRIC UNIVERSE® ‘starts with something big and breaks it into pieces.’ The fission process is repeated in further electrical disturbances by flaring red dwarfs and gas giant planets ejecting rocky and icy planets, moons, comets, asteroids and meteorites. Planetary systems may also be acquired over time by electrical capture of independent interstellar bodies such as dim brown dwarf stars. That seems the best explanation for our ‘fruit salad’ of a solar system. Capture of a brown dwarf requires that the dim star accommodate to a new electrical environment within the plasma sheath of the Sun. The brown dwarf flares and ejects matter, which becomes planets, moons and smaller debris. The ‘dead’ dwarf star becomes a gas giant planet.
This is not the 4.5 billion year evolutionary story of the clockwork solar system taught to us in Astronomy I. There is no primordial nebular ‘stuff’ of which all objects in the solar system were formed at the one time. The ‘stuff’ of which stars are made has been differentiated and altered by plasma discharge processes. All stars produce heavy elements in their photospheric discharges, which alters their internal composition with time. And the ‘stuff’ expelled electrically from inside stars and gas giants is further modified elementally, chemically and isotopically.
Meteorites bear witness to this process in their isotopic anomalies and the myriad tiny glass spheres found in most of them — attributed by more than one brave astronomer to ‘lightning’ in the solar nebula. The production of heavy radioactive elements in situ by ‘cosmic thunderbolts’ renders standard geological dating techniques useless for establishing ages. Other distinctions of the ELECTRIC UNIVERSE® model are so stark as to provide simple observational tests to eliminate one or the other model. Saturn’s moon, Enceladus, provides another opportunity."
ref:
http://www.holoscience.com/wp/enceladus ... ric-moons/
In my own view, Stars do not form as binary stars by being 'scattered like buckshot' and then re-assembling into binary stars. I think that there has something to do with First it's two threads, then it gathers in dual multitudes of two threads each, then there's a separation, and then there's the intertwining (z-pinches?) that form the two stars. Is this correct in the EU understanding?

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Re: Star Birth

Unread post by Brigit Bara » Mon Jan 28, 2019 2:11 pm

It's pretty obvious that binary stars are not single stars and do not collide with one another. Sirius is a pertinent example. I'm interested in how a binary star forms.
Yes, it is pretty obvious that stars, planets, moons and asteroids do not collide and then re-differentiate from the crash materials.

You are interested in how a binary star system forms. Let me get that for you.

"The matter inside stars becomes positively charged as electrons drift toward the surface. The resulting internal electrostatic forces prevent stars from collapsing gravitationally and occasionally cause them to “give birth” by electrical fissioning to form companion stars and gas giant planets. Sudden brightening, or a nova outburst marks such an event. That elucidates why stars commonly have partners and why most of the giant planets so far detected closely orbit their parent star." ~electric stars, page 6 http://www.holoscience.com/wp/synopsis/

The positively charged material within the star begins to offset from itself, then part of it is repelled, resulting in a companion star.

As for the ubiquitous spherical objects: small spheres have been created in the lab by running electricity through various materials.

So have craters with flat floors and central peaks. This is evidence that the fissioned moons covered with craters have been electrically scarred by the parent body, or by encounters with other bodies.
Last edited by Brigit Bara on Mon Jan 28, 2019 2:22 pm, edited 1 time in total.
“Oh for shame, how these mortals put the blame upon us gods, for they say evils come from us, when it is they rather who by their own recklessness win sorrow beyond what is given…”
~Homer

Sithri
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Re: Star Birth

Unread post by Sithri » Mon Jan 28, 2019 2:21 pm

Brigit Bara wrote:
It's pretty obvious that binary stars are not single stars and do not collide with one another. Sirius is a pertinent example. I'm interested in how a binary star forms.
Yes, it is pretty obvious that stars, planets, moons and asteroids do not collide and then re-differentiate from the crash materials.

You are interested in how a binary star forms. Let me get that for you.

"The matter inside stars becomes positively charged as electrons drift toward the surface. The resulting internal electrostatic forces prevent stars from collapsing gravitationally and occasionally cause them to “give birth” by electrical fissioning to form companion stars and gas giant planets. Sudden brightening, or a nova outburst marks such an event. That elucidates why stars commonly have partners and why most of the giant planets so far detected closely orbit their parent star." ~electric stars, page 6 http://www.holoscience.com/wp/synopsis/

The positively charged material within the star begins to offset from itself, then part of it is repelled, resulting in a companion star.

As for the ubiquitous spherical objects: small spheres have been created in the lab by running electricity through various materials.

So have craters with flat floors and central peaks. This is evidence that the fissioned moons covered with craters have been electrically scarred by the parent body, or by encounters with other bodies.
So basically binary stars form from ejecting another star from a larger one and then orbiting one another. Interesting. I was thinking that they form simultaneously with one another in two separated birkeland filaments that form twisting around one another, which in themselves are z-pinching their own stars, thus forming the spinning that a binary star would require as well as the 'feeding' circuits that keep a binary star alive.

It wouldn't make sense that they begin spinning round one another if they were ejected from a star unless there were some kind electrical/magnetic/electromagnetic effect that bound them to one another yet provided the distance between the two needed to form the binary aspect of a binary star.

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Re: Star Birth

Unread post by Brigit Bara » Mon Jan 28, 2019 2:41 pm

by Sithri » Mon Jan 28, 2019 2:21 pm
I was thinking that they form simultaneously with one another in two separated birkeland filaments that form twisting around one another...
Here are the star forming filaments:
Image
A network of 27 star forming filaments derived from Herschel observations of the IC 5146 molecular cloud. Credit: D. Arzoumanian et al.


The z-pinch can look like this:

Image

"This ‘planetary nebula’ shows a typical star’s co-axial circuit in a more active ‘glow mode.’ The electromagnetic plasma ‘pinch’ centered on the star is clearly evident."
“Oh for shame, how these mortals put the blame upon us gods, for they say evils come from us, when it is they rather who by their own recklessness win sorrow beyond what is given…”
~Homer

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