From: The Sun's Density GradientLloyd wrote: ↑Thu Jun 16, 2022 7:32 pm Charles explained that there is no evidence of a solar circuit externally. There is no megalightning discharging from the heliopause to the Sun's surface.
How are batteries made? By separation of opposite charges. Imploding interstellar filaments compress opposite charge streams into plasma spheres of charge-separated double layers (i.e. stars). As these spheres slowly discharge they give off heat and light energy.
https://thunderbolts.info/wp/forum3/phpBB3/ ... php?t=5613
__CC replied on Apr 22, 2013:
_I'm saying that the proposed current would not radiate (or converge) spherically. Rather, by the magnetic pinch effect, it would be consolidated into a finite number of filaments, like in a plasma lamp. With a breakdown voltage of only 1 V/m in the interplanetary medium, such a current will easily step up to arc mode, and the electrons will quickly achieve relativistic velocities. The magnetic fields will be powerful, and the currents will be well confined. Scott is safe from the accusation that the currents haven't been detected, because only if a satellite got inside one of these filaments would any current at all be detected. But then he has an even bigger problem. If 10^26 watts were streaming in through a handful of pinched filaments, they would be visible, and their footpoints would be the brightest features on the surface of the Sun, like the footpoints on the inner sphere of a plasma lamp. I think Peratt said once that the Sun glows brightly, but the incoming circuits do not, just like the way a lightbulb glows, but the extension cord does not. But this just isn't correct. Maybe I'll send him a plasma lamp for Christmas this year, and ask him to explain why the discharge channels are visible, when by his reckoning only the inner sphere should light up, and consistently across its entire surface.