Page 47 - Nick Begich - Angels Don't Play This Haarp Advances in Tesla Technology
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www.earthpulse.com 40 www.earthpulse.com
"When the Earth came alive it began constructing its own membrane, for the general
purpose of editing the sun...The sky is a miraculous achievement. "52
Lewis Thomas, 1973
Chapter Five
HIGH ON THE SKY
Countless suns in other galaxies spray cosmic rays in all directions
continuously. Closer to home, our own sun radiates gamma rays, X-rays and shorter
wavelengths of ultraviolet light. When they hit the outer layers of earth's
atmosphere, these cosmic rays are absorbed by atoms, but in the process electrons are
knocked off the atoms. Thus there is a constant flux (flow) of electrons at this
altitude, and the atoms are changed to positively charged ions. This process gave the
ionosphere its name. Although ionization happens at heights as high above the earth
as 1,000 kilometers and as low as 50, the positively charged ions and negative
electrons are most dense at altitudes of 80 to 400 kilometers. In non-metric terms,
the ionosphere begins at an altitude of about 30 miles and goes up to about 300 miles
or more.
This natural electrically charged shield around the earth filters harmful
wavelengths of solar radiation, protecting the surface of Earth from significant
bombardment.53
Blown toward Earth on the solar wind, electrically charged particles follow
Earth's magnetic field lines. Along such paths of least resistance, high energy
particles funnel toward the magnetic poles of Earth, squeeze into a poleward current
called the electrojet, and are dumped toward the earth. Sometimes the electrojet
dwindles, but at other times a solar flare floods the system with high energy particles
and the sky lights up into the dancing, shifting curtains of an auroral display. At the
south pole it is called the aurora australis, and the northern lights is the aurora
borealis.
For eons the electrojet has flowed in the form of a direct current into the
polar regions of Earth. Who would want to change the electrojet?
THE PATH TO A GIGA PROJECT
In a way it began with a few puzzled radio listeners. In 1933 a man in
Eindhoven, Holland tried to listen to a radio station in Beromunster, Switzerland.
Suddenly he was hearing two stations. The powerful Radio Luxembourg was not
supposed to tune in at this frequency; it broadcast at a frequency far apart on the dial,
but here it was superimposed on the Swiss station.
52 Lewis Thomas, "The World's Biggest Membrane, The Lives of a Cell", Massachusetts Medical
Society 1973.
53 Robert W. Christopherson, Geosystems. Macmilian NY 1992.