
Experimental results obtained in
1879 when conducting electricity
through rarefied gases in a vacuum
tube and modulated by a magnetic
field. From left to right, the tube
is filled with nitrogen, oxygen,
carbon dioxide and tin(IV) chloride.
The positive electrode is on top.
The tube with nitrogen produced a
spiral, the one with carbon dioxide
a set of nine stacked toroids
embracing a Y-shaped column. (c)
John Rand Capron.
Shots in the Dark Part Two
Mar 28, 2011
The previous Picture of the
Day described several of the many
myths that refer to a celestial
chain of arrows or a celestial
ladder. It asked, how is this theme
to be explained?
A significant pointer is the
realisation that stories concerning
the arrow-chain form a subset of the
mythology of the axis mundi, the
"cosmic column" that occupies such a
prominent position in the sacred
traditions of most human cultures.
Embedded in this larger body of
material, the suspicion that the
serried arrows mark a specific stage
in the temporal development of the
column will not be wide off the
mark.
When, during the second part of the
nineteenth century, physicists began
to experiment with electrical
discharges in rarefied gases, they
soon discovered that a sustained
discharge may exhibit striation and
take the form of a row of multiple
discs or toroids. Perhaps preceded
by the little-known Henry d’Abria in
1843, the Welsh judge and physicist,
Sir William Robert Grove
(1811-1896), first hit upon the
phenomenon in 1852. James Clerk
Maxwell (1831-1879) himself observed
in 1873:
“Some of the forms of electrical
discharge through rare gases are
exceedingly remarkable. In some
cases there is a regular alternation
of luminous and dark strata, so that
if the electricity, for example, is
passing along a tube containing a
very small quantity of gas, a number
of luminous disks will be seen
arranged transversely at nearly
equal intervals along the axis of
the tube and separated by dark
strata. If the strength of the
current be increased a new disk will
start into existence, and it and the
old disks will arrange themselves in
closer order. … These, and many
other phenomena of electrical
discharge, are exceedingly
important, and when they are better
understood they will probably throw
great light on the nature of
electricity as well as on the nature
of gases and of the medium pervading
space.”
In modern terminology, such
“luminous disks” are viewed as a
type of plasma instability occurring
in z-pinches; informally – though
not in the published literature –
they have been referred to as "Peratt
Instabilities," after the American
plasma physicist, Anthony Peratt.
Although Maxwell’s expectations were
aimed at developments in physics,
the analysis of such "stacked
toroids" or "nested mushrooms" finds
a pointed application in the study
of human traditions. Reporting on an
extensive set of experiments in
1878, Warren de la Rue (1815-1889)
and Hugo W. Müller employed a wide
variety of imaginative labels to
characterise the Peratt
Instabilities they obtained,
including “luminosities arranged in
serpent-like form," “parallel
worm-like entities," “spheroids,"
“disc-shaped strata," “saucer-shaped
strata," “umbrella-shaped strata,"
and “small crescent-shaped disks of
red light," ranging anywhere in
number from 2 or 3 to 62. The
metaphor of arrows was frequently
resorted to as well: an
“arrow-headed nebulosity,"
“luminosities, part of them
arrow-headed, arranged in a wavelike
formation," “arrow-headed
luminosities," “arrow-headed
entities," “luminosities with arrow
heads arranged in a spiral," and so
forth.
John Rand Capron (1829-1888) was an
English solicitor and amateur
astronomer who generated similar
toroids and spirals during
electrical experiments he performed
around 1879 to prove the electrical
nature of the aurorae. Moreover,
apparently without exception, myths
of the arrow-chain type situate that
curious configuration in the sky.
For these reasons, only the most
spineless of scholars would forbid
that such traditions could be based
on a conspicuous electric discharge
event directly observed in the
earth’s atmosphere on one or perhaps
a few occasions in the prehistoric
past. The energy required for such a
plasma tube to form, to glow and to
develop "Peratt instabilities" must
have been enormous.
A study of the evolutionary stages
that would precede as well as follow
that of the nested cones might
clinch the matter. De la Rue and
Müller had already noted that, under
some circumstances, “two disks near
the negative join together, assuming
the form of a double convex lens,"
while, under others, “the strata
become thicker and fewer; lastly,
the current passes with increasing
difficulty, and the strata have a
tendency to run together.”
Perhaps the latest in a long string
of diligent researchers, Peratt has
put a firmer backbone into such
early researches using cutting-edge
technology and simulation software
run on the world’s fastest computer.
In 2003, he outlined his finding
that an initial set of 7 to 9
plasmoids, loosely aligned, will
form a rigid "backbone"- or
"ladder"- structure under increasing
electrical charge. As the current
intensifies, the "branches" will
begin to warp and merge, until the
pinch collapses.
As seen, in the world of mythology,
the embedded arrow cones that once
led up to the sky run a similar
gamut of manifestations and
deformations, including the
metamorphosis of the pliable string
into a rigid ladder or a storeyed
mountain and the final
disintegration of the latter. With
penetrating insight, Peratt also
launched the idea that prehistoric
petroglyphs categorised as
"caterpillars" and "ladders" present
visual records of this linear
evolution.
The above amounts to circumstantial
proof that the earth’s atmosphere
once or repeatedly sported a
prodigious z-pinch, stratified into
an array of discrete plasmoids. With
such evidence lined up, the question
what unusual physical circumstances
could have spawned such a display is
surely right on target.
Rens Van der Sluijs
http://mythopedia.info
Books by Rens Van Der Sluijs:
The Mythology of the World Axis
The World Axis as an Atmospheric
Phenomenon
New
DVD
The Lightning-Scarred
Planet Mars
A video documentary that could
change everything you thought you
knew about ancient times and
symbols. In this second episode of
Symbols of an Alien Sky, David
Talbott takes the viewer on an
odyssey across the surface of Mars.
Exploring feature after feature of
the planet, he finds that only
electric arcs could produce the
observed patterns. The high
resolution images reveal massive
channels and gouges, great mounds,
and crater chains, none finding an
explanation in traditional geology,
but all matching the scars from
electric discharge experiments in
the laboratory. (Approximately 85
minutes)
Video Selections
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