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www.space.news...
New evidence suggests the solar system is moving into a new energy zone which is altering the magnetic fields of the planets.
There is reason to believe Earth is not the only planet in the solar system undergoing climate change, meaning CO2 emissions are not the primary force responsible for the rise in global temperatures. Growth of the dark spots in Pluto, reports of auroras on Saturn, polar shifts in Uranus and changes in light intensity of Neptune suggests something very strange is happening in the solar system.
The warming of the entire solar system has been supported by some scientists. One dramatic shift that is taking place is the strength of the sun’s electromagnetic field.
Another piece of evidence in favor of solar change is the sudden rise in galactic star dust. Ulysses, a space probe, has been monitoring the amount of star dust flowing through the solar system since 1992. The sun’s magnetic field impacts how much star dust drifts through the solar system. The magnetic field attracts more star dust as it strengthens.
originally posted by: MisterSpock
Id assume the heat radiating from the earth is the actual culprit. Apparently our man made warming is affecting the entire solar system (maybe even the entire milky way???).
My what powerful creatures we are.
Sources include:
(1)TheEventChronicle.com
(2)AboveTopSecret.com
It seems that the global warming crowd is begging for something to worry about and needs a booger man to be frightened of.
originally posted by: GetHyped
a reply to: seasonal
Your source is trash... and circular:
Sources include:
(1)TheEventChronicle.com
(2)AboveTopSecret.com
What is this trash doing in the Science & Technology forum? It's nothing more than a blog devoid of scientific evidence that's dressed up to look like a legit new site. This is literally fake news, ffs.
originally posted by: eNumbra
So, question. Should we:
A: ignore it because we didn't cause it after all and go on living our lives?
B: take a serious scientific look at what could happen because of it and what if anything we can do about it?
Rather than continue to berate and mock eachother over the moot point of what the actual cause is of what most people agree is in fact happening.
originally posted by: Teikiatsu
originally posted by: eNumbra
So, question. Should we:
A: ignore it because we didn't cause it after all and go on living our lives?
B: take a serious scientific look at what could happen because of it and what if anything we can do about it?
Rather than continue to berate and mock eachother over the moot point of what the actual cause is of what most people agree is in fact happening.
I'd rather we let our technology advance without hampering the energy sector (ANY sector) so that we have a robust manufacturing base to deal with whatever the universe throws at us.
But that's me. I'm not waging a war on technology, like the AGW zealots appear to be.