The Electrical “Volcanoes” of Jupiter’s Moon Io
The so-called “volcanoes” on Jupiter’s moon Io have long been conventionally interpreted as the effect of tidal forces acting on the moon. But a recent scientific paper has announced that this longstanding explanation does not fit with the actual location of the plumes. Is it possible that this failure of…
MEL ACHESON: “Show Me the Math!” | EU 2013
PAUL ANDERSON: Electrical Discharge on Earth’s Surface | EU 2013
Saturn’s Electric Moon Enceladus, Part Two | Space News
The Saturnian moon Enceladus may be one of the most enigmatic bodies in the solar system. For nearly a decade, NASA scientists have faced a series of puzzles that continue to challenge conventional theory. The electrical nature of these puzzling phenomena has grown increasingly evident.
RON HATCH: Relativity in the Light of GPS | EU 2013

Perhaps you’ve already heard that GPS, by the very fact that it WORKS, confirms Einstein’s relativity; also that Black Holes must be real. But these are little more than popular fictions, according to the distinguished GPS expert Ron Hatch. Here Ron describes GPS data that refute fundamental tenets of both…
MEL ACHESON: What’s the Matter with Matter? | EU 2013
An Impossibly Young Supernova? | Space News
It seems that Supernova 2005gl in the barred spiral galalxy NGC 266 demolished standard theories of stellar evolution by exploding before it had shed its hydrogen envelope—a possibility denied by the commonly accepted model of supernovae explosions.
BILL NICHOLS: Electric Earth, Electric Weather | EU 2013
Supernova Defies Astronomical Theory | Space News
A recently discovered supernova has left astronomers scratching their heads. It’s in the wrong cosmic neighborhood, and from the vantage point of conventional theory is behaving quite badly.