Jupiter’s Radio Noises
by Immanuel Velikovsky
The Immanuel Velikovsky Archive
One of the
major deductions from the study of ancient civilizations was the
recognition that the planetary and cometary bodies are charged objects
and the solar system itself is regulated not solely by the law of
gravitation; that electromagnetic interactions must exist and where
following the inverse square law must be unrecognizable in their
effects on the calculations of celestial mechanics charge can,
so to say, be hidden in or masked by the mass. Thus the problem
of Pluto influencing Uranus and Neptune more than its mass can account
for is a case of a substantial charge on a small planet. But where
the less pronounced electromagnetic inverse cube relations take
place, like in Mercurys precession of its perihelion, divergences
from the celestial computations are registered as anomalies. Mercury
moves through a general magnetic field of the Sun that influences
it more strongly than it influences the remoter planets besides
the influence on it and on them of the magnetic solar spots and
solar wind.
In catastrophic
conditions, with two celestial bodies approaching one another closely,
the electromagnetic interactions may become most pronounced
the cometary protoplanet Venus produced a display of discharges
between its head and its trailing part when the orbital movement
of the protoplanet was disrupted by the close approach to the Earth;
in the latter, eddy currents were generated with the effects due
to such phenomenon (see Worlds
in Collision, Epilogue ). Interplanetary discharges
took place when Mars and Earth came into close contact (Worlds
in Collision, Synodus ). The projected volumes dealing
with catastrophes preceding those that took place at the end of
the Middle Kingdom in Egypt carry the titles Saturn and the
Flood and Jupiter of the Thunderbolt.
The planet-god
Jupiter (Zeus, Ormuzd, Shiva, Marduk) was pictured with a thunderbolt
because of the spectacles witnessed by the inhabitants of the Earth
like a discharge that was directed toward Venus when it approached
its parental body (Worlds in Collision, Blazing Star),
or when the Earth itself might have been the target, as the content
of the volume Jupiter of the Thunderbolt will reveal.
The understanding
that the solar system is not neutral in its components but possibly
neutral as a whole led me to the conclusion that the charge of the
Sun may be equal to the combined charge of the planetary bodies
and that quite possibly in Jupiter is assembled the major portion
of it; thus, being ca. 1000 times smaller than the Sun it is charged
to a very substantial potential.
Its potential
could have been greater in the past; certainly planetary bodies
exchanging discharges neutralized themselves to some degree; Mars,
for instance, must have been much more charged in the past before
the events of the first half of the first millennium before the
present era. The charge of the planet, I thought, may even be decisive
in the position the planet occupies in the planetary system. I even
considered theoretically a system in which gravitation is completely
supplanted by electromagnetic effects with the charged planets traveling
in the magnetic field of the Sun, itself being a charged body that
by its rotation creates the magnetic field permeating the solar
system; I also contemplated the existence of magnetic shells that
would be the determinative of the planetary distances (Bodes
Law).
Since 1941,
I insisted that electromagnetic interrelations in the solar system
cannot be ignored this was the theme of my long debate, in writing
and oral, with Einstein from August 1952 to his death in April
of 1955. At some point in our debate (in a letter written in June
1954) I offered to stake our debate on whether Jupiter sends out
radio noises (of non-thermal nature, as I already claimed in my
Forum Lecture of 14 October, 1954), to which he reacted skeptically,
yet was greatly surprised when nine days before his death I brought
to him the news (New York Times of April 6, 1955) that such
radio noises were accidentally detected.
It has been
long known that Jupiter possesses an angular momentum that is superior
to the angular momentum of the Sun, even of the Sun with the rest
of the planets combined. This appeared to me not without a definite
role of charges accumulated in Jupiter.
Jupiter was
believed to be a cold planet since the l9th century it was
thought to be covered by a frozen mantle of ices over ten thousand
miles thick. To me, however, from the knowledge of its activities
in ancient times, it did not appear as an inert gravitational body;
I thought also of Jupiter as a dark star (Worlds in Collision,
p. 373); but the radio noises that I expected it to be sending out
I considered as of non-thermal origin and so I also expressed myself
in the mentioned Forum Lecture. But whereas I expressed myself in
October 1952: The planet is cold, yet its gases are in motion.
It appears probable to me that it sends out radio noises as do the
sun and the stars. I suggest that this be investigated, in
June 1954 in a letter to Einstein, I took a most definite stand:
Of course, I am a heretic, for I question the neutral state
of celestial bodies. There are various tests that could be made.
For instance, does Jupiter send out radio-noises or not? This can
easily be found if you should wish. This claim was also vindicated
in the announcement made by Burke and Franklin on April 6 of 1955.
The relevance
of the orbital periods of Jupiter and Saturn to the sunspot cycle
appeared to me, if real, based on electromagnetic , interdependence.
The highly charged Jupiter must create a powerful magnetosphere;
it may even create magnetic shells, for distribution of its satellites,
a thing not yet proven; but certainly the large satellites of Jupiter,
and especially the innermost of the Jovian satellites, must be much
affected by its magnetic field. Jupiter itself appeared to me to
be of contrasting charges on various levels which would account
for the potential difference observed in celestial battles by the
ancients between the head and the trailing part of the Jovian progeny
protoplanet Venus (Worlds in Collision, The Battle in the
Sky), the head having been expelled from Jupiters deeper
parts, the trailing part of debris and gases from a more superficial
layer.
Thus discharges
on Jupiter could be dictated by potential difference. The closest
of the Galilean satellites must be acting as a target independent
of whether a spark discharge actually takes place or a stream of
charged particles is directed toward it and to a lesser extent toward
other satellites (the fifth, however is only 112,000 miles mean
distance from the planet). A purely gravitational relationship between
Jupiter and its satellites appeared to me unthinkable; and on this
phenomenon, in my estimate, the purely gravitational system of the
World must stumble, as also on the case of the behavior of the comets
when approaching, then circling the Sun in their perihelia a subject
much discussed by me with Einstein in my effort to convince him
of the fallibility of a purely gravitational system of the solar
system (and of the universe in general).
The discovery
of the Jovian noises (1955), and of the terrestrial magnetosphere
(1958), claimed by me also in the Forum Lecture of 1953, and of
the interplanetary magnetic field centered on the Sun and rotating
with it (1960), and of the solar wind or uninterrupted streams of
plasma (1960), made the purely gravitational system of the World
untenable. Yet among astronomers, as late as 1971, the full significance
of the fact for the understanding of the structure of the universe
only very slowly finds its way, as can be exemplified by a paper
by Prof. Ivan King, The Dynamics of Star Clusters, where
no mention is found of any electromagnetic participation in the
mechanics of the galaxies.
The realization
that Jupiter, which participated in a vigorous way in the theomachy
(celestial battles), is not inert and cold led me to the conclusion
that Jupiter must be also hot under its cloud cover, at some depth.
This afterthought made me also claim that Jupiter is hot in a discussion
with Prof. I. I. Shapiro of M.I.T., well-known authority in astrophysics,
who denied such a possibility. This claim was confirmed recently
by probes of the temperature underlying the surface clouds.
This leads
me to the necessity to discuss some other aspects of the recent
history of Jupiter, which all ancient peoples of the World elevated
to the role of the supreme deity, the role it took over from Kronos-Saturn.
But such a discussion I will undertake separately and at some length.
Reprinted
from the The
Immanuel Velikovsky Archive.
June
16, 2012
Copyright
© 2012 The
Immanuel Velikovsky Archive
|