Unexplained Explosion on the Sun (breaking news), page 6
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reply posted on 3-2-2010 @ 02:32 AM by grantbeed
reply to post by Chadwickus



Hi Chad, I check Spaceweather every day out of habit and
the article was indeedthere a day or two ago, and it has disappeared.

Maybe just a mistake on their part. guess you should hear back soon enough.




reply posted on 3-2-2010 @ 09:44 AM by sv_gravity 800
reply to post by tarifa37



watching the 5 year sun spot video its obvious as the years go by more sunspots can be located.


reply posted on 4-2-2010 @ 02:59 AM by Karilla
reply to post by daddymax



Was this whole post meant to be comedic?

If so, I apologise for pointing out that "expulsiate" isn't a word and there is no black hole in the centre of the sun. Solar flares follow lines of magnetic force in arcs that take them back into the sun.


reply posted on 4-2-2010 @ 03:59 AM by daddymax
reply to post by Karilla



I apologise for pointing out that "expulsiate" isn't a word


It's cool...I'm gonna get it added

don't apologize

Also...no black hole in the center? Says who?

I am fairly certain that a black hole would have some magnetic pull...mmmm yes, I believe it would. I would think that if you looked at a sun spot closely, you would notice it is not a surface event, but a visible vortex towards the center of the sun. With coronal material falling inward. I have heard it said most actually have a corresponding spot/vortex on the opposing side of the sun. As far as water being ejected...I don't know. But if something is going in, something has to come out.


reply posted on 4-2-2010 @ 11:17 AM by davo2012
reply to post by tarifa37



Those comets look very big, seems like something the science community would talk about, in the same way they talk about schumaker leevy impacting jupiter. I think what we are actually watching, is alien technology, ie: spaceships, traveling into a sunspot. the sunspot acts as a vortex to the centre of the sun where a singularity resides, which the alien technology uses to create a wormhole, back to its star of origin, or where ever else it (that is the aliens) desires.



peace.


reply posted on 8-2-2010 @ 07:38 AM by Chadwickus
May as well throw this in here.

Seems the sun, she is waking up!

From
Spaceweather.com:

Behemoth sunspot 1045 is crackling with M-class solar flares--and that's not all. "There have been many loud shortwave radio bursts over the past two days," reports amateur radio astronomer Thomas Ashcraft of New Mexico.


A couple of pics:






These radio bursts are what ham radio operators love!




reply posted on 11-2-2010 @ 06:22 AM by zenius
Would someone be able to tell me please if they noticed an intensity of heat last Sunday...3 days after the topic of this post? Being south of the tropic of Capricorn, it is summer here at present and days around 30 deg. celcius is usual. On Sunday it seemed hotter than usual in the sun, which I noticed when I was standing in the garden, not exerting any energy, and perspiration was dripping into my eyes. That I don't recall happening to me before. Later that day there was a steady stream of reports of sunburn by people at the beach or out and about, despite religiously using sunscreen.
Weather observations reported the usual expected temperatures so why did it feel so much hotter?
I was just curious if it could be a coincidence that the coronal ejection was due to reach earth about then, whether it could have this effect? The day was not windy so I cannot attribute this effect to wind burn.
Has anyone else in the southern hemiphere experienced this on the weekend?

Also, if the spaceship theory is correct and the sunspots are vortices or whatever, how can they survive the supposed extreme temperature? Does this suggest that the sun is not as hot as we are taught and that it's possible that the sun only apparently feels hot because of the reaction of it's energy output with our own atmosphere?

I'm sure I once read somewhere that its very cold in space and reading of various nasa adventures the only time heat is mentioned is when a craft re enters earth's atmosphere. why does the sun appear orangy red. Is that a photo coloring glitch? What colour is it really? If you burn organic matter the flame is white to yellow. The hottest flame color is blue. Please correct me if wrong here. so can someone tell me whey the sun is the color it is and if it has do do with it's temperature or something else?
thankyou
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