Five things you probably didn’t know about The Moon

Five things you probably didn’t know about The Moon

Five things you probably didn’t know about the Moon

Here are five mind-blowing facts you may not have realised about our closest neighbour

1. The Moon is flashing at us and we don’t know why

For many years now we have seen flashes on the Moon. They last between a few minutes to hours and we can’t predict them.

They have been spotted by amateur astronomers as well. Interestingly they do not seem to leave traces behind on the surface of the Moon. 

Some speculate that these flashes could be associated with seismic activity but astronomers do not really know what they are.

Explanation: these flashes are created because the Moon also displays Black Hole Principle behaviour in that sometimes it creates light through the annihilation process of matter and antimatter. 

The Black Hole Principle

The Black Hole Principle

2. A very dense anomaly has been detected under the South Pole of the moon.

As our ability to analyse bodies in space become more sophisticated, we have been able to scan the moon more deeply and found a few surprises. This has led to the finding of a very dense anomaly at the South Pole of the Moon. It could be some kind of very heavy metal and it’s 300 km beneath the surface. Our sense of the consistency of the moon has had to change. 

Explanation: As discussed in previous articles on this site, it seems that many elements are generated by The Black Hole Principle, possibly all the elements. So this could be the reason why there is a dense anomaly 300 km beneath the surface of the Moon. It is being created by the centre of the Moon. 

Five things you probably didn't know about the moon

Image: © NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center/University of Arizona

3. The Moon contains water ice and could be producing it.

We used to think that the Moon was dry but now we know there is a lot of water there. It is especially around the poles and in craters as water ice.

Explanation: Water production is one of the hallmarks of The Black Hole Principle. We would expect water to be plentiful at the poles as The Black Hole Principle works in a bipolar jet fashion as seen at the galaxy level.

Moon craters then become a result of an upwelling force not impact. As the flow reaches the surface from the Moon’s core, water jets are formed, hence the ice found in the craters. So far there have been signs that mainstream scientists are realising that moons can have upwelling effects and explosions due to the crater dynamics but this is far from a generalised idea. 

bipolar jet black hole

4. There could be active volcanoes on the moon.

Astronomers have detected signs of volcanic activity on the far side of the moon. We think there was some in the past but it could still be going on. We see volcanic activity on other moons in the solar system but this was also unexpected. 

Explanation: Volcanic activity is also the periodic release of energy from beyond the speed of light from the inner black hole dynamo of each planet of each moon. 

5. The moon is brighter than the sun in the gamma-ray spectrum.

We now have different telescopes in use that look at different parts of the electromagnetic spectrum. This has revealed to us that the Moon is actually brighter than the sun in the gamma-ray spectrum.

Explanation: Of course, the mainstream scientists will say that the gamma rays are only just hitting the moon from outside, but according to The Black Hole Principle, it is perfectly possible for the Moon to be creating gamma rays itself. 

I hope you have enjoyed our exploration of the Moon. Are there any facts that we have missed out? Which new revelations have interested you the most? Please leave a comment below this article. 

 

Where did the Water of the Earth come from?

Where did the Water of the Earth come from?

Where did the Water of the Earth come from?

The Earth is almost covered with water, but it may surprise you that scientists are still debating as to how all this water got here in the first place. The general consensus is that water arrived originally on this planet via an impact collision with a comet or asteroid. Analysis of comets and asteroids in space have shown that the type of water they contain is not always an exact match. 

The real answer is that we don’t know for sure the answer to this pretty basic question. 

Finding the Solution

According to the Black Hole Principle, each and every celestial body from stars to planets to comets has the ability to create its own water from its centre. In this way, they follow the pattern laid out for everything from supermassive black holes to thunderstorms. 

The Ocean beneath us

The Earth is no different. In 2013, I gave a keynote lecture at the Institute of Noetic Sciences in which I predicted that the water of the Earth is actually being produced by its interior. In just a few months, scientists announced to the world that an ‘ocean’ had been found deep below the Earth’s surface.

It is water bound up in rocks and crystals but nevertheless represents more water than exists on the Earth’s surface. 

The Simple Pattern

Once you know The Black Hole Principle, you can easily make such predictions about the universe because you understand the simple underlying pattern throughout reality. 

Therefore we have solved the questions of where Earth’s water has come from – it is being produced by the Earth itself. 

 

A massive reservoir of water has been found in deep space

A massive reservoir of water has been found in deep space

Water has been found in Deep Space

In 2011, scientists announced that they had found a massive reservoir of water in space many times larger than our oceans.

It was in the vicinity of a black hole. So what is going on?

Water everywhere!

We used to think that water was rare in the universe but now we are founding it all over the place even coming out of stars including our own sun.

On Mars, Pluto and on various moons.

It’s important to note that it is coming out in discrete jets. So it’s not sheets of ice melting of a comet for example – these are jets.

Comet Jets

Comet Jets. Credit: ESA/Rosetta/NAVCAM, CC BY-SA IGO 3.0

The same pattern at every level

Back in 2006, I published that the same mechanism that creates thunderstorms is also behind galactic black holes. There is antimatter, gamma-ray bursts and electrons at almost the speed of light.

A massive reservoir of water has been found in deep space

Image: NASA, James Gordon Graham

 

Storms also produce water in the form of rain and I was a bit concerned to say that water is produced in this way in galaxies too.

However, I didn’t have to wait long as scientists soon found water across the universe and even been produced by black holes themselves.

Water in deep space

Credit: Pixabay

Conclusions

So there you have it, water is being produced by black holes at every level of the universe.

We have even found a reservoir of water deep in the Earth suggesting that this is where our oceans actually come from.

Hope you enjoyed that episode of Punk Science TV. Subscribe for more and see you next time.

 

Water plumes on Enceladus, black holes and life

Water plumes on Enceladus, black holes and life

Saturn’s moon, Enceladus is producing massive water plumes as well as organic molecules. But does this indicate life is on Saturn’s moon?

Shock Geysers

When massive water geysers were found on Saturn’s moon Enceladus – it was a bit of a shock. These activities were explored by the Cassini probe which also found complex organic chemicals.

Water plumes on Enceladus, black holes and life

Credit: NASA

Scientists seem to think that all that is needed to create life are water, organic molecules and energy despite the fact that just one DNA molecule being created randomly has massive odds stacked against it.
But that’s another story.

Let’s just say the possibilities exist for life on other worlds.

But is it life?

Conditions ‘for life’ are now being found all over the solar system like on Enceladus. Does this mean that life exists there?

Not necessarily.

Enceladus is giving off plumes of water and complex organic molecules. The plumes of water are being powered by the Black Hole Principle – just as they power jets of water in galactic black holes.

Powered from the inside

It’s the same mechanism powering the water jets all the way down at each level, creating intermittent plumes and jets of water.

And I have discussed before, the same principle is responsible for the organic molecules in planetary ejections such as methane from Mars. In fact, we have been finding complex organic molecules coming out of the centres of galaxies just as we would expect if black holes are creating them.

So all this could be created in processes that is devoid of life as we know it. However, 

This doesn’t mean necessarily that biological alien life is not on Saturn’s moon, Enceladus as it could also be there as well as displaying Black Hole Principle behaviour. 

Do you think we need more evidence before declaring ‘life’ on other worlds?

Please leave a comment below. 

 

Top 8 Predictions of the Black Hole Principle that even made me gasp

Top 8 Predictions of the Black Hole Principle that even made me gasp

When I received The Black Hole Principle through a vision in 2003, I knew it to be the truth of how the universe works. Pretty soon, the evidence for it started to mount up and as it did, it became clear that the theory was excellent at predicting the behaviour of stars and planets. But sometimes there is a real humdinger of a piece of evidence that is such a shockingly vivid example of the power of the theory that it amazes me all over again. So in this article, we will be looking at the Top 8 Predictions of the Black Hole Principle that even made me gasp.

1. Water comes out of sunspots

In 1997 a team at the University of Waterloo Ontario confirmed that water is found on the sun, specifically as steam ejected from sunspots. Now for a lot of people, this should be a total surprise; I would have thought that such news could send shock waves around the world. I am guessing from the lack of references to this that most academic scientists don’t even know about it. It seems so incongruent with expectations that it has been mainly ignored.

Back in 2006 Punk Science described how sunspots also display Black Hole Principle (BHP) behaviour. As we now know, that includes the production of water. So from this perspective, it is not a surprise that sunspots produce water because they would be expected to show the same sort of behaviour as galactic black holes and terrestrial gamma-ray flashes.

http://solar-center.stanford.edu/news/sunwater.html

Top 8 Predictions of the Black Hole Principle that have even made me gasp

Image: Graphic Stock

2. The Galaxy is breathing

The Black Hole Principle involves a movement, like a breath at the Perception Horizon. When the breath goes one way, matter and antimatter are produced. When it goes another, gamma rays and light are produced. The actual particles differ according to the level of the universe you are talking about, but the process is the same. This is why we observe gamma-ray bursts that shine bright and then fade and events in space that don’t seem to follow the expected pattern of an explosion or another violent event.

So I was amazed to find that there are indeed clouds of hydrogen gas near the centre of the Milky Way called high-velocity clouds that appear to be breathing in and out. It could be a sign of the breathing process that is actually occurring in the central black hole itself that is being translated in the gas clouds immediately around it.

Richter P, Wakker BP. Our growing breathing galaxy. Scientific American. January 2004; 28-37.

3. The Milky way spews antimatter fountains

Very shortly after I had the vision of the Black Hole Principle I spotted this finding in New Scientist. Although it is quite an old discovery now, for me it was so important because it confirmed what I saw in the vision – that antimatter is produced in a black hole. It was this article that gave me the courage to move forward despite not being a physicist or academic, as I knew that The Black Hole Principle was important and was able to make predictions about the universe.

Reich ES. When Antimatter attacks. New Scientist. 24 April 2004; 34-37.

Top 8 Predictions of the Black Hole Principle that have even made me gasp

Image: ESA/Hubble, L. Calçada (ESO) Creative Commons Wikimedia

4. Antimatter comes out of thunderstorms

At the time of writing Punk Science, I stated that thunderstorms are basically powered by the same mechanism that is behind galactic core black holes and if so, we should be able to see fast-moving electrons (which we do), gamma-ray bursts which we do except we call them gamma-ray flashes and antimatter. At the time the latter had not been discovered, but in 2011 NASA made the announcement that they indeed found antimatter in thunderstorms.

NASA’s Fermi Catches Thunderstorms Hurling Antimatter into Space http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/GLAST/news/fermi-thunderstorms.html  10th January 2011. 

Top 8 Predictions of the Black Hole Principle that have even made me gasp

Image: NASA, James Gordon Graham

5. The Galaxy is blowing bubbles

One of the mainstays of the Black Hole Principle is of course that gamma-ray bursts are produced by the cores of galaxies. This means they should also be produced by our own galaxy which we found out fairly recently, also harbours a supermassive black hole. But just as the mainstream world was shocked when they found black holes at the centre of all galaxies, they were not expecting anything to come out of it either.

But in 2010 an analysis of data from the Fermi telescope revealed that our galaxy is actually blowing bubbles; gamma-ray bubbles are emerging from the supermassive black hole of the Milky Way galaxy. Again this was a surprise to mainstream scientists not expecting to see this sort of activity in our home galaxy and not sure what was causing it.

Further analysis of the image showed the characteristic bipolar jet of The Black Hole Principle. The bubble patterns seem to be created by the jets spiralling over time. Again a beautiful example of The Black Hole Principle behaviour found in an unexpected place.

Top 8 Predictions of the Black Hole Principle that have even made me gasp

Gamma Ray bubbles discovered from Milky Way (FERMI image copyright of NASA)

6. Moss grows in spirals

In 1997, biologist Fred Sack examined some Moss plants that had just returned from being aboard the space shuttle mission, Colombia. These moss plants were known to either grow towards the light or towards gravity. What is interesting is that out in space where there was no light to move towards, the plants grew in a spiral. I was so excited to read about this because according to The Black Hole Principle, the underlying fundamental force moves in a spiral.

This spiral force of light and consciousness gives rise to all the forces in physics such as gravity. Away from the light and from the Earth, the plants seemed to have tuned into the underlying pattern of gravity – a spiral. Sadly on a further mission in 2003, the space shuttle broke apart on re-entry and the crew was killed. Further moss experiments were recovered, however, reconfirming this spiral growth and this article was published in Nature.

http://www.nature.com/news/2005/050131/full/050131-1.html http://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2002/16jul_firemoss/

7. Water is produced on Mars

For much of my life I have been preoccupied with the scientific world and ever since I was a child I remember people talking about the wish to find water on other planets. The idea was that as soon as we found water we would find life. Much to everyone’s surprise then, water turns out to be pretty abundant in the universe. What the mainstream scientists don’t understand is why. They come up with all sorts of theories about past collisions with snowball comets and asteroids.

However, according to The Black Hole Principle, water is actually produced from the black hole itself. More work needs to be done in this but I think it is a product of a higher dimensional process as the antimatter and matter split happens, water is produced much like in this diagram.

So it was not a surprise to me when the announcement came that Mars is actually populated by water that is being regenerated. That’s because I know that the planet Mars is displaying Black Hole Principle behaviour within its interior and that includes water production. So of course surface water is being regenerated just as it is in the sun, as the source of the water is the interior of the planet.

Top 8 Predictions of the Black Hole Principle that have even made me gasp

Discovery of water on Mars, Image: NASA

8. The Earth’s oceans come from the Earth’s interior

Speaking of water coming from the interior of a planet, the Earth itself is a black hole process showing the same types of behaviours as a galactic black hole in space. For many years it has been a mystery as to how the oceans of the planet arrived on the Earth. Various theories have been put forward including that in the Earth’s distant past, an icy comet collided with the Earth depositing its water and it has simply been recycled ever since. There was no proof of this though, but it has been received wisdom.

Knowing what I knew about the way black holes produce water through their dynamic processes and that this is happening at every single level of the universe, it was simply logical that the Earth’s oceans are being produced by the interior of the planet. So I made the public announcement and prediction at the Institute of Noetic Sciences in 2013 that the true source of the Earth’s oceans was actually the Earth’s interior.

Within about eight months it was announced by mainstream scientists that there is a massive ocean in the interior of the Earth. The answer to where the Earth’s water comes from seems to have been found.

https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn25723-massive-ocean-discovered-towards-earths-core/

Top 8 Predictions of the Black Hole Principle that have even made me gasp

Image: Graphicstock Illustration of comet hitting Earth and seeding oceans

Conclusion

The beauty of having a simple, elegant description theory is that it is simple enough to predict aspects of the universe as yet undiscovered. I have now gone on public record saying that we should expect to see evidence of antimatter coming from volcanoes so time will tell if this is correct. We have already discovered antimatter geoneutrinos coming from the Earth’s core so maybe this is all we need.

So far, The Black Hole Principle has been able to describe the universe in a more accurate way than many mainstream theories and to even expect some of the more seemingly bizarre observations. And that is what a powerful idea in science is all about – it is strongly predictive. If you would like to check out just some of these predictions take a look at Punk Science here.  On the basis of this article, what are your thoughts on the predictions of The Black Hole Principle? Leave your comments below. 

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