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Joining the Dots Part One:
Fireworks on New Year's Day
May
06, 2009
Can there be any truth in the
traditional linkage of a total
conjunction of planets and universal
disaster or is this just arrant
nonsense?“All that the earth
inherits will … be consigned to
flame when the planets, which now
move in different orbits, all
assemble in Cancer, so arranged in
one row that a straight line may
pass through their spheres. When the
same gathering takes place in
Capricorn, then we are in danger of
the deluge.”
This statement is attributed to the
Babylonian priest, Bēl-re’ušunu (3rd
century BCE), better known as
Berossus, and epitomises the once
widespread astronomical concept of
the ‘Great Year’. From the Roman
Empire to China, ancient
philosophers defined the ‘Great
Year’ as a large cosmic cycle,
completed when the five naked-eye
planets, the sun and the moon appear
in linear conjunction. It was
thought that such complete
conjunctions occasioned cosmic
catastrophes – devastating floods
and fires that destroyed the
preceding cosmos and inaugurated a
new world.
Standard astronomical models do not
acknowledge any mechanisms
accounting for global tides or fires
in response to planetary
conjunctions. While the tidal
effects of the moon are
satisfactorily explained with
gravity, the same force cannot
demonstrably be made to work for the
planets, as has often been pointed
out.
The crux is that this dismissal
rests on the antiquated perception
of interplanetary space as a vacuum,
in which gravity is the only
operational force. With the coming
of the Space Age, this simplistic
paradigm has been incontrovertibly
refuted. It is now known that most
of the interplanetary space, and of
the entire cosmos, consists of
plasma and almost every body in the
solar system is enclosed in a plasma
sheath, technically a double-layer
structure that serves to shield the
object inside from electric fields
impinging on the shell.
Teardrop-shaped magnetotails, which
are structurally comparable to the
comas and ion tails of comets,
extend out into space from the
earth, Venus, and most other
planets. These are often so long as
to extend to the orbit of the next
planet, sometimes ‘tickling’ the
protective sheath around that object
as they point away from the sun. The
solar equivalent to these planetary
magnetospheres is the solar wind,
which is ultimately responsible for
auroral displays on the earth and on
other planets.
The physical composition and the
interaction of these magnetospheres
are extremely complex and scientists
are only just beginning to get a
handle on the subject. What is
already clear, however, is that the
possibility of the sun or any of the
planets ‘influencing’ the
electromagnetic weather on another
body is no longer so remote.
As the plasma sheaths of different
bodies brush against each other in
the ecliptic plane, they effectively
complete a giant electric circuit,
allowing a transfer of electric
charge between adjacent planets.
Such discharging offers a
straightforward explanation for the
‘forgotten’ Pythagorean conviction
that ‘comets’ arise when planets
form linear conjunctions. Can it
also account for the destructions by
fire and flood the ancients believed
would happen when the planets line
up?
To find out, it is necessary to make
a careful distinction between
apparent linear conjunctions as seen
from a viewpoint on earth and actual
linear conjunctions in space.
Insofar as some or all the naked-eye
planets are regularly seen to
arrange themselves in linear
conjunctions, ancient astronomers
might have based their ideas
concerning a ‘Great Year’ on
observation. The approximate
conjunction of Jupiter, Saturn,
Mars, Venus, Mercury and the rising
sun stretched out over a number of
constellations on the 15th. April
2002 is comparable to the so-called
thema mundi or ‘cosmic birth chart’
outlined by Hellenistic astrologers,
in which the seven traditional
‘planets’ span across the entire
starry sky. Could such ‘apparent’
lineups of planets have inspired
associations with transient events
of the kind envisioned by the likes
of Berossus?
In theory, current knowledge about
the solar wind and the ‘windsock’
behaviour of planetary magnetotails
allows that a lineup of bodies in
the solar system might cause
extremely violent disturbances of
the geomagnetic field. For such a
magnetospheric explanation to work,
however, the linear arrangement of
the moon, the sun and the five
naked-eye planets cannot have been
apparent, as, in that case, the
plasma tails of these bodies could
not line up to produce a ‘closed
electric circuit’.
Also, the earth would have to be
physically displaced outside the
string of planets, yet if it was to
experience any of the resulting
‘fireworks’, it must have been
caught in the crossfire itself. As
the earth’s ionosphere would be
loaded to excess with charged
particles, an outburst of auroral
activity might go some way towards
explaining the reported
‘conflagration’ of the world.
The requirement of a ‘real’ linear
conjunction of planets, including
the earth, in true state fits better
with Berossus’ intimation that the
“gathering” of the seven players
occurred in a single constellation,
but results in a visual separation
of the exterior planets on the night
side and the interior planets on the
day side, in solar transit. The
ancient authorities on the subject
of the Great Year all lived at times
when astronomy was advanced enough
to distinguish apparent visual
arrangements in the sky from
inferred physical models of reality.
That a great conjunction triggers
destructive interplanetary ‘storms’
fits into the segment in time when
astronomers first became interested
in the periodicities of planets. The
idea may have received its ultimate
inspiration from mythical memories
about a time when comets and
meteors were rampant, when the world
suffered in flames, and when stars
and planets saw an apparent
reorganisation that followed the
breakup of a previous linear
arrangement of bodies. In the real
world, a linear alignment of planets
with the solar wind may sometimes
have coincided with an exceptionally
intense discharge event.
The above is not to suggest that
planetary conjunctions must always
precipitate cosmic discharging or
‘bad weather’ on earth – far from
it. It is easy to think of
complicating factors that help to
explain why, for example, the
conjunction of 2002 did not wreak
any havoc. For one thing, many
congregations of planets may simply
be loose enough to allow sufficient
leeway for plasma tails to ‘miss’
the sheaths of other planets. The
role of coronal mass ejections
warrants investigation – are these a
required cause or a consequence of
the ‘fireworks’ accompanying a great
conjunction?
What are the restrictions on the
orientation of the solar wind on
such occasions? Finally, the
intensity of electric discharging
during conjunction must be modulated
by the initial charge differential
between the bodies involved, but
this will vary over time, gradually
being cancelled out during quiescent
periods, when no extraneous forces
impinge on the system.
The bottom line is that ancient
speculations about a link between
catastrophic events and planetary
movements present a challenge that
is well worth renewed attention. In
this particular case, plasma physics
offers an intellectually palatable
way to vindicate the ‘astrological’
claim that the antics of the planets
can affect the conditions of life on
earth as a whole. The role of
concomitant effects, such as the
repositioning of the geomagnetic
field, tsunamis and earthquakes,
also invites further consideration.
As a theory of cosmic time, the
ancient notion of a ‘Great Year’ may
thus be rescued from the dustbin of
scientific theorising.
Contributed by Rens Van der Sluijs
http://mythopedia.info
Books by Rens Van der Sluijs:
The Mythology of the World Axis
http://www.lulu.com/content/1085275
The World Axis as an Atmospheric
Phenomenon
http://www.lulu.com/content/1305081
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