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Incredible New Solar
Patterns Appear
Part 2 - The Pattern Remains
By Ted Twietmeyer
tedtw@frontiernet.net
6-30-5
 
The right-angled, geometric shaped X-ray region on our sun (above) is not going away. It is rotating toward the right with the sun's rotation. East and west are reversed with respect to earth east and west directions.
 
NEW IMAGES AS OF JUNE 30th 2005
 
The image below shows the pattern at a wavelength of 28.4nm. It has moved only a few degrees to right with the sun's rotation since it was first observed two days ago. This indicates this region is on the surface of the sun. The sun's surface is supposed to be a seething, boiling, super-hot mass of plasma in complete chaos (mainstream physics theory, not mine.) This begs to ask the question - how can this pattern can remain intact? In fact, what we are seeing would appear to contradict popular physics theory about fusion in a star. I would love to hear from any astronomer out there that can explain this.
 
 
 
 
 
Upon examining a 17.1nm image of the sun below (which represents even shorter X-ray wavelengths) we can see that this region extends further downward we can see above. The pattern then curves to the left. Also clearly visible are small white loops, that do not appear in other X-ray wavelength images. These are arcing outward into space, in the general direction of the satellite's camera. As small as they appear, these reach out thousands of miles. On the left and right horizons, we can also see 'fuzzy' blue loops that arc out into space and loop back in again. These may be solar flares, or just X-ray manifestations of powerful localized magnetic fields.
 
 
 
 
 
 
Visible on the left horizon of the sun in the above image, is a brilliant white region slowly rotating in our direction. This is a sunspot (see picture at bottom of page.) X-Rays are high velocity particles which are affected by electrostatic and magnetic fields. There may be a connection here with Thunderbolt's electrical solar theory for these structures.
 
 
 
 
 
 
We can readily see in the above 30.4nm image that with longer wavelength images, the missing X-ray region is less visible.
 
 
It also explains the reason why white light images do not show this region (see below.) We can observe that more sunspots are slowly rotating to the right, toward the satellite's camera.
 
 
 
 
 
 
We will continue to monitor this most unusual event as well as the weather to look for a connection.
SOMETHING is indeed happening here. Let's hope and pray this isn't some twisted, black ops hi-tech project.
 
What will be interesting is to see what comes next.
 
Stay tuned...
 
Ted Twietmeyer
http://www.data4science.net
 

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