Source of Earth's Magnetic Field ??
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G=EMC^2 Glazier - 24 Apr 2007 10:50 GMT Saying its field comes out of molted,and solid iron at its core has to be humankinds worse theory. It just don't fit. It goes against our best laws of physics. It is fudging all the way down. No dynamo can be made to work under these conditions.that are at this hot core. It could not have been an electrical e engineer to have come up with this lousy theory. Jupiter needs no hot melted iron which is very bad Curie effect. and earth has a magnetic field of 0.31 gauss,and jupiter has 4.28 gauss Now lets look at Mars the red planet because of having so much iron.and it has a melted iron core,and spins about the same speed of Earth Here is the kicker it has only 1% of Earth's magnetic field (0.0003 gauss) Get the picture? Things are just not adding up. This just jumped in If Earth's core has some nickel in it that makes it worse to create a dynamo.. I was going to leave out saturn but its kind of interesting. Magnetic field(71% of Earth's) just 0.22 gauss,and yet it spins fast 10hr 13min. Well in the past I posted Earth's mgnetic field never flips Its source needs a much better theory. Bert
G=EMC^2 Glazier - 24 Apr 2007 13:53 GMT Well must add this to the big feature of Saturn.Its lighter than water.That means it has a smaller core for its size,and not much iron,or other heavy elements bert
Double-A - 25 Apr 2007 15:52 GMT > Well must add this to the big feature of Saturn.Its lighter than > water.That means it has a smaller core for its size,and not much iron,or > other heavy elements bert Maybe its center is a big cork, like one of those you use for fishing.
Double-A
Art Deco - 25 Apr 2007 16:32 GMT >> Well must add this to the big feature of Saturn.Its lighter than >> water.That means it has a smaller core for its size,and not much iron,or [quoted text clipped - 3 lines] > >Double-A Another profound alt.astronomy science post.
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John "C" - 25 Apr 2007 17:04 GMT > >> Well must add this to the big feature of Saturn.Its lighter than > >> water.That means it has a smaller core for its size,and not much iron,or [quoted text clipped - 5 lines] > > Another profound alt.astronomy science post. Now that's a nice Art Deco!
I'm glad that you have changed.
HJ
G=EMC^2 Glazier - 26 Apr 2007 00:43 GMT Well I think I made my point. There is no dynamo spinning at the hot liquid iron at the Earth's center. Better thinking is needed. That theory is very hot fudge. To really think magnetic fields you have to think of "magnetar's They have no iron,or liquid hydrogen,and yet they are 100 billion times more magnetic than the Earth. They have the strongest field in the universe.(by far) They give clues to having such great magnetizim Very fast spin(some go around many hundreds of times in just one second. There density is this. Are whole solar system Sun as well into a 20 mile in diameter ball. Every car on Earth compress to the size of a grape, So what can be inside? Well with such gravity compression it has to be fused subatomic particles. So my theory that I get writing this down is Gravity creates magnetisim(magnetic field) by squeezing atoms. Earth's core can be used here. IMy theory needs some more work(thinking) but I like it better than liquid spinning iron Bert
Double-A - 26 Apr 2007 14:30 GMT > Well I think I made my point. There is no dynamo spinning at the hot > liquid iron at the Earth's center. Better thinking is needed. That [quoted text clipped - 11 lines] > some more work(thinking) but I like it better than liquid spinning iron > Bert Magnetars are a type of neutron star. Neutron stars are thought to have electron atmospheres. Perphaps it is these electrons at the surface, being spun around with the star at such a rapid rate, that cause the magnetic field. In an old physics experiment, if you revolve charged balls fast enough around a center point, you produce a field.
Double-A
Art Deco - 26 Apr 2007 16:47 GMT >> Well I think I made my point. There is no dynamo spinning at the hot >> liquid iron at the Earth's center. Better thinking is needed. That [quoted text clipped - 18 lines] >revolve charged balls fast enough around a center point, you produce a >field. Well there's a shocker -- moving charge creates a magnetic field. Perhaps you should educate some of your fellow officer corps members about this amazing fact.
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G=EMC^2 Glazier - 26 Apr 2007 18:06 GMT Double-A I like your posts it fits well. Magnet's go from very cold(strong field to very hot no field 4,000 miles down its very very hot. So that's it in a nut shell. My thinking is best because it never fudges bert.
§ñühw¤£f - 26 Apr 2007 15:31 GMT John \"C\ <honestjohn@centurytel.net> pinched out a steaming pile of<zL-dnQKXRM7-4bLbnZ2dnUVZ_jKdnZ2d@centurytel.net>:
>> >> Well must add this to the big feature of Saturn.Its lighter than >> >> water.That means it has a smaller core for its size,and not much [quoted text clipped - 12 lines] > >HJ Earths Magnetic field? Quite obvious: all those big speakers in those boom boxes.
Double-A - 24 Apr 2007 15:47 GMT > Saying its field comes out of molted,and solid iron at its core has to > be humankinds worse theory. It just don't fit. It goes against our best [quoted text clipped - 13 lines] > Well in the past I posted Earth's mgnetic field never flips Its > source needs a much better theory. Bert Bert,
I had a teacher back in school who said he could not wear a watch because his body would magnetize it! Iron rich blood? He also had the "powers" of the water dowser. So with the Earth, it is the flow of liquid iron in its deep planetary veins that causes its magnetic field. Rotation has nothing to do with it, since we observe that Uranus has a magnetic fieled tilted 59 degrees from its rotation. But convection flows of iron, driven by the heat at the Earth's core, cause the Earth's magnetism. Remember Bert, "it's the flow".
Double-A
John "C" - 24 Apr 2007 16:02 GMT "Double-A" <double-aa@hush.ai> wrote in message
> I had a teacher back in school who said he could not wear a watch > because his body would magnetize it! Iron rich blood? He also had > the "powers" of the water dowser. That's funny!
I was a teacher, I couldn't wear a regular watch because of magnetics, and I can water witch.
HJ
G=EMC^2 Glazier - 24 Apr 2007 20:00 GMT HJ My house water is still turned off. How much will you charge to water witch in my back yard?,Justa small X marks the spot will do..
John "C" - 24 Apr 2007 21:37 GMT > HJ My house water is still turned off. How much will you charge to > water witch in my back yard?,Justa small X marks the spot will do.. Finding water is the easy part.
Who's going to dig the hole?
HJ
G=EMC^2 Glazier - 24 Apr 2007 22:02 GMT HJ I can rent a deep hole digger. Florida's water coming up say 30 feet smells of rotten eggs(lot of sulfur in it) My main problem is lack of rain,and I like taking 2 showers every day.(down to one) Severn Trent Mafia has found this way to kill me(they own Fl. utilities) I'm a smart tough old bird,and staying alive to fight back. I can't win but will die trying. Bert
BradGuth - 26 Apr 2007 07:21 GMT > HJ I can rent a deep hole digger. Florida's water coming up say 30 feet > smells of rotten eggs(lot of sulfur in it) My main problem is lack of > rain,and I like taking 2 showers every day.(down to one) Severn Trent > Mafia has found this way to kill me(they own Fl. utilities) I'm a > smart tough old bird,and staying alive to fight back. I can't win but > will die trying. Bert Get youself a good DE pool filter, along with a few bags of spare DE plus a good 40 watt UV lamp to stick into whatever water flow or storage tank. The only good water microbe/bug is a dead water microbe/ bug.
I believe there's also a spendy electrical/ion way of extracting much of that sulfur. - Brad Guth
G=EMC^2 Glazier - 26 Apr 2007 12:05 GMT Guth I'mfine staying with the way I can collect rain water (filter it),and keep it at 109F Problem is since Severn Trent Mafia shut of my water we are in a major drought. Go figure Thinking of building a water tower to hold 1,000 gallons painted black and has a Styrofoam night time cover. My water bill averaged 70 bucks a month times 15 months to a Mafia year so that's a 1,000 bucks saved and the water is not coming out of the ground rhrough millions of dead bodies. I like that Bert
G=EMC^2 Glazier - 26 Apr 2007 12:52 GMT Lets forget that bad theory of electricity created 4,000 miles under ground,and making its way to the south pole through very hot bad conducting rock.(good insulator) Lets take objects with great spin and dense surface material in motion(heavy stuff). We come up with Sun Jupiter (thickest atmosphere,and fast spin) Strongest magnetic fields Hmmm The other gas planets have no heavy atmosphere for they are mostly hydrogen and helium so they must have very little fields as compared with even Earth's. Now let go with Earth It has great tidal motion its surface having 73% of salt water. I'm thinking friction to create an electrical charge. I'm taking this thinking to create a magnetic field. A field not created in the center of the Earth where the Curie Effect has to be fudged away,but in the opposite direction where there is constant motions from the 1030 mph spinning equator,tidal,and atmosphere motions,and an easy current of flowing electrons from the south magnetic pole to the north. Well if you read my posts it shows two ways,and both are better than that impossible dynamo in the Earth's core My science never fudges. My thinking might not always be right,but my ideas are honest Bert
BradGuth - 27 Apr 2007 19:55 GMT > Lets forget that bad theory of electricity created 4,000 miles under > ground,and making its way to the south pole through very hot bad [quoted text clipped - 14 lines] > core My science never fudges. My thinking might not always be > right,but my ideas are honest Bert There's also a few spare terawatts of potentially spare moon energy that's just going around us at merely 2e20 joules or 72e20 KW. Go figure. - Brad Guth
Art Deco - 27 Apr 2007 20:23 GMT >> Lets forget that bad theory of electricity created 4,000 miles under >> ground,and making its way to the south pole through very hot bad [quoted text clipped - 18 lines] >that's just going around us at merely 2e20 joules or 72e20 KW. Go >figure. What is "potentially spare moon energy", Brad?
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BradGuth - 27 Apr 2007 19:50 GMT > Guth I'mfine staying with the way I can collect rain water (filter > it),and keep it at 109F Problem is since Severn Trent Mafia shut of my [quoted text clipped - 4 lines] > water is not coming out of the ground rhrough millions of dead bodies. > I like that Bert Sounds perfectly doable, and it shouldn't be all that spendy. Get yourself a small wind powered lift-pump. - Brad Guth
Art Deco - 27 Apr 2007 20:03 GMT >> Guth I'mfine staying with the way I can collect rain water (filter >> it),and keep it at 109F Problem is since Severn Trent Mafia shut of my [quoted text clipped - 7 lines] >Sounds perfectly doable, and it shouldn't be all that spendy. Get >yourself a small wind powered lift-pump. Inhaled any HF lately, Brad?
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Artimus Q Dufflebag - 27 Apr 2007 20:40 GMT >>> Guth I'mfine staying with the way I can collect rain water (filter >>> it),and keep it at 109F Problem is since Severn Trent Mafia shut of my [quoted text clipped - 9 lines] > > Inhaled any HF lately, Brad? Gotten HIV from a dirty duck lately, Deco?
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PEAT - 29 Apr 2007 08:30 GMT > >>> Guth I'mfine staying with the way I can collect rain water (filter > >>> it),and keep it at 109F Problem is since Severn Trent Mafia shut of my [quoted text clipped - 11 lines] > > Gotten HIV from a dirty duck lately, Deco? Have _you_, my fine fellow transgendered bisexual?
Snarky, noting that the Monkey might want to watch out that he doesn't slurp the above
WhyDidLoonelKillHisMommy - 29 Apr 2007 10:18 GMT >>>>> Guth I'mfine staying with the way I can collect rain water (filter >>>>> it),and keep it at 109F Problem is since Severn Trent Mafia shut of my [quoted text clipped - 13 lines] > Snarky, noting that the Monkey might want to watch out that he doesn't > slurp the above GaytonMcFagg0t another nym for you.
here's yer philosophy on life again.
"I love horse c0ck, ..." -- Gayton McFagg0t admits his love of horse penis publicly for the first tim, in Message-Id: <pan.2007.01.16.12.38.11.237669@statements.likeyours>
"When a gerbil starts kicking around inside of me, I feel all good inside." -- Gayton McFagg0t gives one reason why he loves gerbil stuffing in, "I love horse c0ck, ..." -- Gayton McFagg0t admits his love of horse penis publicly for the first tim, in Message-Id: <pan.2007.01.05.12.35.11.236969@statements.likeyours>
"I hate getting anal stitches. My daddy never lets me heal properly." -- Gayton McFagg0t whines about the after effects of his daddy bunghole rapings in , message-Id: <pan.2007.01.29.11.49.11.236123@statements.likeyours>
"I had my first mental breakdown when my mommy made me eat her out. It was then that I know that I was gonna be a bottomboy." -- Gayton McFagg0t describes his path to homosexuality in, Message-Id: <pan.2007.01.16.11.29.12.238234@statements.likeyours>
"My daddy gave me a pony for my 11th birthday. Little did he know the pony was riding me too." -- Gayton McFagg0t descrines his path to bestiality in, Message-Id: <pan.2007.01.17.12.04.13.237721@statements.likeyours>
"My parents excepted the fact that I love horse genitalia. I haven't told them about my cravings for gerbils yet. " -- Gayton McFagg0t tries to let his parents in on his trisexuality in. Message-Id: <pan.2007.01.03.10.31.11.235412@statements.likeyours>
PEAT - 30 Apr 2007 04:36 GMT > >>>>> Guth I'mfine staying with the way I can collect rain water (filter > >>>>> it),and keep it at 109F Problem is since Severn Trent Mafia shut of my [quoted text clipped - 15 lines] > > GaytonMcFagg0t another nym for you. <snip the usual phony quotes made up by a homophobic throwback to the '80s>
Tell me, does Moppy's cock taste very good? Watch out, the anal sex is next -- and you won't be the top, I assure you.
Snarky
WhyDidLoonel/PLaneJaneMurderlHisMommy - 30 Apr 2007 04:39 GMT >>>>>>> Guth I'mfine staying with the way I can collect rain water (filter >>>>>>> it),and keep it at 109F Problem is since Severn Trent Mafia shut of my [quoted text clipped - 13 lines] >> GaytonMcFagg0t another nym for you. > <schnip Gayton McFagg0t c0ckslurp fantasy> Unlike you I don't suck c0ck. BTW how's Loonel's c0ck tasting these days Gayton McFagg0t.
here are more of yer woids, gayboi:
"I love horse c0ck, ..." -- Gayton McFagg0t admits his love of horse penis publicly for the first tim, in Message-Id: <pan.2007.01.16.12.38.11.237669@statements.likeyours>
"When a gerbil starts kicking around inside of me, I feel all good inside." -- Gayton McFagg0t gives one reason why he loves gerbil stuffing in, "I love horse c0ck, ..." -- Gayton McFagg0t admits his love of horse penis publicly for the first tim, in Message-Id: <pan.2007.01.05.12.35.11.236969@statements.likeyours>
"I hate getting anal stitches. My daddy never lets me heal properly." -- Gayton McFagg0t whines about the after effects of his daddy bunghole rapings in , message-Id: <pan.2007.01.29.11.49.11.236123@statements.likeyours>
"I had my first mental breakdown when my mommy made me eat her out. It was then that I know that I was gonna be a bottomboy." -- Gayton McFagg0t describes his path to homosexuality in, Message-Id: <pan.2007.01.16.11.29.12.238234@statements.likeyours>
"My daddy gave me a pony for my 11th birthday. Little did he know the pony was riding me too." -- Gayton McFagg0t descrines his path to bestiality in, Message-Id: <pan.2007.01.17.12.04.13.237721@statements.likeyours>
"My parents excepted the fact that I love horse genitalia. I haven't told them about my cravings for gerbils yet. " -- Gayton McFagg0t tries to let his parents in on his trisexuality in. Message-Id: <pan.2007.01.03.10.31.11.235412@statements.likeyours>
BradGuth - 29 Apr 2007 20:02 GMT > >GuthI'mfine staying with the way I can collect rain water (filter > > it),and keep it at 109F Problem is since Severn Trent Mafia shut of my [quoted text clipped - 8 lines] > yourself a small wind powered lift-pump. > -BradGuth You'll also need a 40' section of 36" steel pipe that you stick onto a substantial foundation, that's not situated over one of those pesky sink-holes.
Put your wind driven turbine on top of that sucker. With any luck and wise investment, you should be able to cut those utiliy power lines and otherwise forget about using public water, that's as you know getting just as spendy as good beer. - Brad Guth
G=EMC^2 Glazier - 29 Apr 2007 21:56 GMT Guth right you are $70 a month for water can buy 140 cans of beer and that is about half of my beer costs($185) still about 85F no rain,. Getting by but a half inch of rain would be very nice. Bert
BradGuth - 30 Apr 2007 18:23 GMT > Guthright you are $70 a month for water can buy 140 cans of beer and > that is about half of my beer costs($185) still about 85F no rain,. > Getting by but a half inch of rain would be very nice. Bert In the near future, make that $70 good 7 cans of beer, and that's only if you can walk to/from whatever store because, you'll also be paying $10/gallon of motor fuel, and totally forget about whatever residentual refrigeration, as that'll cost you more than than whatever cache of beer inside.
Never mind those hocus-pocus faith-based rich getting a whole lot richer and more otherwise powerful by the day. - Brad Guth
Double-A - 26 Apr 2007 16:16 GMT > HJ I can rent a deep hole digger. Florida's water coming up say 30 feet > smells of rotten eggs(lot of sulfur in it) Just think of it as your spring tonic. Remember when people used to pay good money to take sulfur and molasses for their health? Maybe that's why Florida water was thought to be the fountain of youth! There are life forms on Earth that thrive on sulfur.
Double-A
G=EMC^2 Glazier - 26 Apr 2007 18:18 GMT Double-A Reality is terrorist can make a bomb from the chemicals in Florida's dirt. Its chemicals are shipped all over the world to make soil fertile. Lots of phosphorus. All done cheaply by strip mining.right next to fraight train open box cars(no trucking needed I wonder if the Moon has phosphorus at its surface?. It could be of some use??. Bert
Double-A - 26 Apr 2007 14:48 GMT On Apr 24, 8:02 am, "John \"C\"" <honestj...@centurytel.net> wrote:
> "Double-A" <double...@hush.ai> wrote in message > > I had a teacher back in school who said he could not wear a watch [quoted text clipped - 7 lines] > > HJ Hmmm! Maybe we've stumbled onto a priciple of science here: a relationship between a personal magnetic field and the ability to detect water!
My teacher also won bowling chanpionships. How about you?
Double-A
John "C" - 26 Apr 2007 17:36 GMT > On Apr 24, 8:02 am, "John \"C\"" <honestj...@centurytel.net> wrote: > > "Double-A" <double...@hush.ai> wrote in message [quoted text clipped - 16 lines] > > Double-A That's amazing!
As a youth I did bowl in a league and we did win a championship.
Another funny thing, the two long copper wires I use to dowse are not magnetic. I can also use a crystal on a gold chain to find things and answer questions, eg. the sex of an unborn baby by holding the crystal and chain above her big belly and ask it the baby is a girl, and the crystal will swing in a circular motion for "yes" or swing back and forth for "no". All these methods have never failed yet.
HJ
Double-A - 26 Apr 2007 21:14 GMT On Apr 26, 9:36 am, "John \"C\"" <honestj...@centurytel.net> wrote:
> > On Apr 24, 8:02 am, "John \"C\"" <honestj...@centurytel.net> wrote: > > > "Double-A" <double...@hush.ai> wrote in message [quoted text clipped - 30 lines] > > HJ Incredible!
How will science ever explain such things?
I think my teacher used the traditional forked willow stick. But one time some years later at our high school, they needed find a method to locate where the water line ran. The science teachers were scratching their heads, so they brought in a local housewife who used the two bent welding rods method. She walked up and down in front of the school until she had found the pipe for them!
I, on the other hand, never had trouble with watches, spent little time bowling, never wanted to be a teacher, and couldn't use any of those devices to find water even if it were right under my nose.
Double-A
John "C" - 26 Apr 2007 21:46 GMT > On Apr 26, 9:36 am, "John \"C\"" <honestj...@centurytel.net> wrote: > > [quoted text clipped - 49 lines] > > Double-A Electric companies usually have at least one employee that can use rods to find buried electricity cables and buries natural gas lines
I wonder if one could find a buried optical fiber cable? I'll work on that sometime.
HJ
Art Deco - 26 Apr 2007 22:23 GMT >On Apr 26, 9:36 am, "John \"C\"" <honestj...@centurytel.net> wrote: >> [quoted text clipped - 30 lines] >> will swing in a circular motion for "yes" or swing back and forth for "no". >> All these methods have never failed yet. * Post lots of boasts about your high IQ and incredible talents.
>> HJ > [quoted text clipped - 14 lines] > >Double-A You forgot to mention your absolute faith in the FSN.
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Art Deco - 24 Apr 2007 16:21 GMT >> Saying its field comes out of molted,and solid iron at its core has to >> be humankinds worse theory. It just don't fit. It goes against our best [quoted text clipped - 26 lines] > >Double-A Which absolutely nothing to do with your claims that gravity is caused by a mysterious flowing substance.
Can you explain how this fluid causes two masses to be attracted to each other?
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Double-A - 26 Apr 2007 21:18 GMT > >> Saying its field comes out of molted,and solid iron at its core has to > >> be humankinds worse theory. It just don't fit. It goes against our best [quoted text clipped - 32 lines] > Can you explain how this fluid causes two masses to be attracted to > each other? Didn't you read about the experiment with the two suction hoses in the swimming pool? Illustrated it perfectly. Maybe oc has the link.
Double-A
Art Deco - 26 Apr 2007 22:26 GMT >> >> Saying its field comes out of molted,and solid iron at its core has to >> >> be humankinds worse theory. It just don't fit. It goes against our best [quoted text clipped - 37 lines] > >Double-A Water is not this mythical "fluid" y'all put so much faith into, yet another inappropriate analogy. But I forget, inappropriate analogies are the foundations of the Flowing Space Nonsense.
[froups restored]
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Phineas T Puddleduck - 26 Apr 2007 23:16 GMT > Didn't you read about the experiment with the two suction hoses in the > swimming pool? Illustrated it perfectly. Maybe oc has the link. > > Double-A When you don't understand the question, just say so...
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Hagar - 27 Apr 2007 03:03 GMT >> >> Saying its field comes out of molted,and solid iron at its core has to >> >> be humankinds worse theory. It just don't fit. It goes against our [quoted text clipped - 41 lines] > Didn't you read about the experiment with the two suction hoses in the > swimming pool? Illustrated it perfectly. Maybe oc has the link. Deco of all people should be familiar with this principle: whenever PuddleQuack purses its lips in a sucking fashion, thee two are inevitably drawn together, because they both suck.
G=EMC^2 Glazier - 24 Apr 2007 19:55 GMT Double-A I go with the flow. Igo more with the flow of Bud. Your teacher had a lot of iron in his blood. Earth's dynamo is 4,000 miles to its magnetic poles. I hope it has a platinum,or gold or aluminum,or copper wiring to move the electrons out to the poles. and I( hope they are very cool. and have the right diameter. Best to keep in mind a conducting wire thickness obeys the inverse square law.. Does the Earth being a conductor obey it as well? magnetic fields and their creation and current charge and motions are tricky stuff. Bert
Art Deco - 24 Apr 2007 21:50 GMT >Best to keep in mind a >conducting wire thickness obeys the inverse square law.. Hah, good guess, Bert, but no. The thickness of a conductor obeys the diameter of the die from which it was drawn.
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