Article: <[email protected]>
From: [email protected](Nancy )
Subject: Re: GRAVITY - the Zetas Explain
Date: 1 Feb 1997 22:07:42 GMT
In article <[email protected]> Paul Campbell
asks:
> I'd like to turn this question around and ask you Nancy
> if light causes aurora why then why do they change so
> rapidly? Certainatly the light output from the Sun does not
> change greatly, yet the aurora does. Might I suggest that
> there is actually uneven discharge of solar particles from
> the Sun due to other solar events that are variable, such as
> Sun Spots, solar Flares, coronal holes and plauges.
> [email protected] ()
(Begin ZetaTalk[TM])
Where there are of course uneven solar discharges, the auroral
variations are due more to cumulative bending than any other
factor. Were you at a point where the light rays that constitute
auroras were just BEGINNING to bend, you would barely see the
color displays. At a distance, you are seeing spots that
represent cumulative bending, which of course does NOT occur all
in a straight line toward any given observer.
(End ZetaTalk[TM])