It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by Human_Alien
It's still the same body which I believe is making its way into our inner solar system and...it is this body that's (might be) disturbing the Sun and sending off these huge CMEs. And now...it may be responsible for whatever we're hearing/feeling on Earth.
Kinda presents a concise package of explanations, doesn't it?
Originally posted by camus154
Originally posted by Human_Alien
It's still the same body which I believe is making its way into our inner solar system and...it is this body that's (might be) disturbing the Sun and sending off these huge CMEs. And now...it may be responsible for whatever we're hearing/feeling on Earth.
Kinda presents a concise package of explanations, doesn't it?
Not really, unless you're a planetary physicist who cares to elaborate on how a planetoid body making its way into the inner Solar System could cause an increase in solar activity and seismic activity on earth--if it's even seismic activity to begin with.
Let's try to remember that there are about 1,000 steps between observation A and conclusion Z, folks
Originally posted by jimmyx
i have to tell this in light of what is going on...
i live in the central valley of california, about 70 miles east of san francisco. i have lived here since 1975, so i know how our weather patterns vary from year to year. back in 2003 we had one of those days where it drizzled rain all day long, something like seattle gets alot of the time (been there several times). it was overcast all day, but no lightning or thunder, just steady drizzle. i was outside on our porch having a smoke, when i heard thunder, but this was strange, because, unlike any other time before or to this day, it seemed to "roll" in from the south and move toward the north in a very slow motion of rumble, it vibrated the ground and my house, all the while maintaining the some tone and pitch. there was no initial "crack" nor was there any change in the grey "lighting" of the cloudy sky. this happened only that one time in the 37 years since i have lived here.
Originally posted by jimmyx
i have to tell this in light of what is going on...
i live in the central valley of california, about 70 miles east of san francisco. i have lived here since 1975, so i know how our weather patterns vary from year to year. back in 2003 we had one of those days where it drizzled rain all day long, something like seattle gets alot of the time (been there several times). it was overcast all day, but no lightning or thunder, just steady drizzle. i was outside on our porch having a smoke, when i heard thunder, but this was strange, because, unlike any other time before or to this day, it seemed to "roll" in from the south and move toward the north in a very slow motion of rumble, it vibrated the ground and my house, all the while maintaining the some tone and pitch. there was no initial "crack" nor was there any change in the grey "lighting" of the cloudy sky. this happened only that one time in the 37 years since i have lived here.
Originally posted by Human_Alien
Well seeing an extra planetary (or binary) body has never entered into our inner solar system in modern recent times, it's very hard to tell what the repercussions might be.
Care to elaborate on why there was a first-time 'tornado' in the Sun the other week?
Yeah.
Thought not.
We'll have to see. But closing your minds to this possibility is senseless. Why not keep this as a remote possible explanation instead of dismissing it all together?