Michael Clarage: Circuitry in Galaxies | Thunderbolts

An analysis of a paper on Extragalactic Magnetism (info below) utilizing data from the SOFIA airplane telescope, the Atacama Large Millimeter/sub-millimeter Array (ALMA) in Western Chile, and the Herschel Space Observatory—the infrared satellite telescope.

By combining observations from the ground, the air, and from outer space—it’s a superb use of multi-wavelength astronomy.

There is a theory that the cosmos around us is chaotic, thermal, unstructured, and meaningless. However, all of this simplifies when you accept that most motion within a galaxy is directed and purposeful. Structures in a galaxy move in coherent ways, and magnetic fields hold things in place. Galaxies are not random and chaotic—they’re complex, articulate systems.

Astrophysicist Michael Clarage, PhD, shares his interpretation of discoveries in the cosmos, particularly when they utilize multi-wavelength research that reinforce EU Model predictions.

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