Remote Viewing — Scientists Discuss Solar Activity Long After Ed Dames Remote Viewed It

Please be sure to read this arti­cle in con­junc­tion with watch­ing Ed Dame’s remote view­ing video which I have posted below. To watch Ed Dame’s remote view­ing video, click here.

Sun goes longer than nor­mal with­out pro­duc­ing sunspots

June 09, 2008 — By Eve­lyn Boswell, Mon­tana State Uni­ver­sity News Service

BOZEMAN — The sun has been lay­ing low for the past cou­ple of years, pro­duc­ing no sunspots and giv­ing a break to satellites.
That’s good news for peo­ple who scram­ble when space weather inter­feres with their tech­nol­ogy, but it became a point of dis­cus­sion for the sci­en­tists who attended an inter­na­tional solar con­fer­ence at Mon­tana State Uni­ver­sity. Approx­i­mately 100 sci­en­tists from Europe, Asia, Latin Amer­ica, Africa and North Amer­ica gath­ered June 1–6 to talk about “Solar Vari­abil­ity, Earth’s Cli­mate and the Space Environment.”

ThinkingManXSmallThe sci­en­tists said peri­ods of inac­tiv­ity are nor­mal for the sun, but this period has gone on longer than usual.

“It con­tin­ues to be dead,” said Saku Tsuneta with the National Astro­nom­i­cal Obser­va­tory of Japan, pro­gram man­ager for the Hin­ode solar mis­sion. “That’s a small con­cern, a very small concern.”

The Hin­ode satel­lite is a Japan­ese mis­sion with the United States and United King­dom as part­ners. The satel­lite car­ries three tele­scopes that together show how changes on the sun’s sur­face spread through the solar atmos­phere. MSU researchers are among those oper­at­ing the X-ray tele­scope. The satel­lite orbits 431 miles above ground, cross­ing both poles and mak­ing one lap every 95 min­utes, giv­ing Hin­ode an unin­ter­rupted view of the sun for sev­eral months out of the year.

Dana Long­cope, a solar physi­cist at MSU, said the sun usu­ally oper­ates on an 11-year cycle with max­i­mum activ­ity occur­ring in the mid­dle of the cycle. Min­i­mum activ­ity gen­er­ally occurs as the cycles change. Solar activ­ity refers to phe­nom­ena like sunspots, solar flares and solar erup­tions. Together, they cre­ate the weather than can dis­rupt satel­lites in space and tech­nol­ogy on earth.

The last cycle reached its peak in 2001 and is believed to be just end­ing now, Long­cope said. The next cycle is just begin­ning and is expected to reach its peak some­time around 2012. Today’s sun, how­ever, is as inac­tive as it was two years ago, and sci­en­tists aren’t sure why.

“It’s a dead face,” Tsuneta said of the sun’s appearance.

Tsuneta said solar physi­cists aren’t like weather fore­cast­ers; They can’t pre­dict the future. They do have the abil­ity to observe, how­ever, and they have observed a longer-than-normal period of solar inac­tiv­ity. In the past, they observed that the sun once went 50 years with­out pro­duc­ing sunspots. That period coin­cided with a lit­tle ice age on Earth that lasted from 1650 to 1700.

Tsuneta said he doesn’t know how long the sun will con­tinue to be inac­tive, but sci­en­tists asso­ci­ated with the Hin­ode mis­sion are ready for it to resume max­i­mum activ­ity. They have added extra ground sta­tions to pick up sig­nals from Hin­ode in case solar activ­ity inter­feres with instru­ments at other sta­tions around the world. The new sta­tions, ready to start oper­at­ing this sum­mer, are located in India, Nor­way, Alaska and the South Pole.

Estab­lish­ing those sta­tions, as well as the Hin­ode mis­sion, required inter­na­tional coop­er­a­tion, Tsuneta said. No one coun­try had the resources to carry out those projects by itself.

Four coun­tries, three space agen­cies and 11 orga­ni­za­tions worked together on Hin­ode which was launched in Sep­tem­ber 2006, Tsuneta said. Among the col­lab­o­ra­tors was Loren Acton, a research pro­fes­sor of physics at MSU. Tsuneta and Acton worked together closely from 1986–2002 and were reunited at the MSU conference.

“His lead­er­ship was immense, superb,” Tsuneta said about Acton.

Acton, 72, said he is still enthused by solar physics and the new ques­tions being raised. In fact, he wished he could knock 22 years off his age and extend his career even longer.

“It’s too much fun,” he said. “There’s so much excit­ing stuff come up, I would like to be part of it.”

A related arti­cle on the Hin­ode mis­sion is located at http://www.montana.edu/cpa/news/nwview.php?article=4902

Major Ed Dames had already pre­dicted all these things…that’s the power of remote view­ing: it’s amaz­ing to see even beyond what sci­ence can see today.

To watch Ed Dame’s video where he remote viewed all these things a long time ago, click here.

This website uses IntenseDebate comments, but they are not currently loaded because either your browser doesn't support JavaScript, or they didn't load fast enough.

There are no comments yet. Be the first and leave a response!

Leave a Reply


Wanting to leave an <em>phasis on your comment?

Trackback URL http://blog.learnremoteviewing.com/2008/06/10/remote-viewing-scientists-discuss-solar-activity-long-after-ed-dames-remote-viewed-it/trackback/