Nanoflares, U-235 fission & the Climatism Clowns

Space weather and solar activity are inconvenient natural climate drivers on earth that alarmist ‘climate scientists’ would rather you didn’t know about. But while NASA GISS are cooking up the numbers,  the Japanese are providing precision scientific advances to fill the void.

Here are the facts from the climate realists:

  • The bands of radiation coming out of the body of the Sun range from Ultraviolet, thru visible radiation, to the Infrared.
  • The bands of radiation emitted by solar flares range from soft x-rays (least energetic x-rays) to Extreme Ultraviolet (highest energy UV).
  • The narrow band between soft x-rays to EUV is Bharat radiation, with wavelengths of approx. 13 to 31 nanometers.
  • In 2013, Dr. M.a. Padmanabha Rao identified the Bharat radiation band as indicative of U-235 fission. See link.
    https://www.researchgate.net/publication/259247129_4_Discovery_of_Self-Sustained_235-U_Fission_Causing_Sunlight_by_Padmanabha_Rao_Effect
  • In “The Fourth Source. Effects of Natural Nuclear Reactors” (publ. 2012),  Robert J. Tuttle describes that with the conditions inside the Sun, U-235 and the fissile elements exist as superfine droplets. Just 1 (one) gram of these droplets coalescing together is sufficient to ignite a fission detonation. That would be a solar flare.  A coronal mass ejection (CME) is a larger coalescence.
  • It has always been a mystery how the Sun’s outer corona (a few million degrees) is so much hotter than the Sun’s surface (5800 to 6000 C).
  • “Nanoflares” in the Sun’s corona had been predicted by Thomas Gold and colleagues in the 1960s. Now, a study led by Shin-nosuke Ishikawa from the Japanese Space Agency (JAXA) confirmed there are millions of “nanoflares” in the corona.
  • Ishikawa and fellow researchers took very precise readings during a flight of JAXA’s Focusing Optics X-Ray Solar Imager (FOXSI-2) which launched from NASA’s site in New Mexico in December 2014.
  • A follow-up mission is scheduled to launch in August 2018.  Perhaps we will have additional data in a shorter time frame.  Traveling at the speed of the New Horizons probe, it would only take a little over 100 days to reach the Sun.

    In summary, while NASA’s Gavin Schmidt and company at GISS are torturing the numbers to lie about the “hottest year on record” , we can be thankful that the Japanese are providing precision scientific advances to fill the void.

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