NEUTRINOS AND ALL THAT ANTARCTIC STRANGENESS
Putting
this blog under the UFO category is going to seem, at first, like quite
a stretch. And indeed, it is, but maybe not such a stretch as one might
think, but we'll get back to that in a moment. For the present, I want
to thank Mr. U. for sharing this information and his own high octane
speculations, which form the nucleus for my own high octane speculations
in today's daily dose of it. So, first things first. What, exactly,
are neutrinos? Well, as the accompanying video explains, they're almost
the same thing as photons, they have no charge and no mass, but unlike
photons they're highly energetic, and penetrate straight through solid
matter with almost effortless ease. Detecting them is thus quite a
challenge, for the usual methods don't work. Lots of ice
however, and buried detectors in the form of light emitters, do the
trick, which brings us to Antarctica and the following video:
Now,
the other odd thing about neutrinos is that they might thus carry
modulated information, information that is the result of their having
traveled so far and passed through so much to get from "there" to
"here." They might thus be used for communication, if one could
figure out how to modulate information into them, or conversely, tease
the information out of them, thus providing a handy picture of the
structure of distant space that cannot be otherwise observed. Their
ability to travel through things would make them invaluable for
communication, provided that nasty modulated information problem could
be solved(if indeed it is possible, a big "if" if there ever was one).
For
the sake of our high octane speculative argument, however, let's assume
(1) that it is possible and (2) that humans have achieved a rudimentary
capability to do so. Now, granted, there's nothing in the little video
nor in the article to suggest either of these assumptions is true. The
video only indicates that some of these neutrinos come from within our
own galaxy, perhaps from the galactic core, and some might come from
outside this galaxy altogether. Nonetheless, we'll continue with our two
assumptions.
Note, then, that this
video and detection of neutrinos occurred in Antarctica (because of the
clear nature of antarctic ice), and that it occurred in 2014, prior to
the strange visits to the polar continent of US Secretary of State John
Kerry and former Apollo astronaut Buzz Aldrin, who has not appeared in
public at all since his antarctic visit, and Patriarch Kiril III of
Moscow (to name some of the more recent strange visitors to the
continent). It is Kerry's presence there that intrigues the most in this
context of "modulated neutrino information" and "communication
possibilities," for as I suggested at the time of his visit, the senior
diplomat of the USA's presence on the continent suggests that his
purpose there was not about "seeing climate change up close and
personal," which was the public explanation for his visit, but rather
that his purpose was a diplomatic one... that he was talking to "someone" or at least, listening
to someone. Such admittedly extremely high octane speculation would
explain the real motivation behind Kiril III's visit, a visit which,
again, the public explanation left one thinking that there had to be
more to it. In Kiril's case the explanation was that he was there simply
to bless the Russian Orthodox chapel of the Russian scientific mission
there. But if this "neutrino hypothesis" is part of the picture, then
the real motivations might be something quite different. Perhaps the
strangeness lies in the patterns - evident in the video - that are being
detected, which might indicate a non-stochastic nature, and hence,
artificial origins. We don't know.
Admittedly,
I'm so far out on the end of the twig on this one that I might indeed
have fallen off the twig altogether. But the presence of neutrino
detectors and neutrinos themselves at the south pole does mean one very
important thing: Antarctica just became even stranger. https://gizadeathstar.com/2017/10/neutrinos-antarctic-strangeness/
No comments:
Post a Comment