I remember looking into sonoluminescence many years ago and wondering if our whole cosmic ocean is really some kind of hyper fluid. I discovered that water turns to ice under intense pressure. It would take 200 km of water to create enough pressure to solidify into ice. I had wondered if our world could be surrounded by a hard ice shell that is the result of our planet drifting in a cosmic ocean and our magnetic field causing diamagnetic repulsion against the fluid, resulting in a thin sheet of atmosphere below the ice shell.
Our moon is tidally locked due to being caught in this solidified liquid. Satellites would just be attached to the inside of this ice shell. Things like HAARP would be to beam high powered frequencies up against the ice shell and negate the earths electromagnetic field, weakening a small part of this shell and allowing "spacecrafts" to go further out into the shell. It would explain why astronauts are seen with bubbles appearing around them during space walks. It would also explain cryo-meteors. We had a cryo-meteor hit our backyard a couple of years ago and it scared the shit out of me. That is what originally got me wondering if we were in some kind of cosmic ocean. I know there is a meteorological explanation for how cryo- meteors form, but it seemed a little hokey to me after having a chunk of ice fall out of the sky and slam into my cement patio. Almost like a chunk of the shell broke off and fell to the Earth.
It would also explain cloud formation. If you ever watch videos where they are filming clouds forming in the atmosphere it is reminiscent of watching heat interact with ice at extreme temperature differences.
Very interesting. I plan to cross Antarctica before I die to figure out the world. I'm sure many questions could be answered by doing this, no matter what I find.
I remember looking into sonoluminescence many years ago and wondering if our whole cosmic ocean is really some kind of hyper fluid. I discovered that water turns to ice under intense pressure. It would take 200 km of water to create enough pressure to solidify into ice. I had wondered if our world could be surrounded by a hard ice shell that is the result of our planet drifting in a cosmic ocean and our magnetic field causing diamagnetic repulsion against the fluid, resulting in a thin sheet of atmosphere below the ice shell.
https://youtu.be/P2WijXMoJVg?si=FJ1QJ4wPRex6NPj6
Our moon is tidally locked due to being caught in this solidified liquid. Satellites would just be attached to the inside of this ice shell. Things like HAARP would be to beam high powered frequencies up against the ice shell and negate the earths electromagnetic field, weakening a small part of this shell and allowing "spacecrafts" to go further out into the shell. It would explain why astronauts are seen with bubbles appearing around them during space walks. It would also explain cryo-meteors. We had a cryo-meteor hit our backyard a couple of years ago and it scared the shit out of me. That is what originally got me wondering if we were in some kind of cosmic ocean. I know there is a meteorological explanation for how cryo- meteors form, but it seemed a little hokey to me after having a chunk of ice fall out of the sky and slam into my cement patio. Almost like a chunk of the shell broke off and fell to the Earth.
https://youtu.be/07FYT8kOh2g?si=Xwe4yE3-_sWtUhWY
It would also explain cloud formation. If you ever watch videos where they are filming clouds forming in the atmosphere it is reminiscent of watching heat interact with ice at extreme temperature differences.
https://youtu.be/nn6KMlS8mQc?si=g-yXlnIopOGQQMX0
https://youtu.be/ik9J9NgBhoc?si=kdybeoB1l8Uh5eEM
Or the videos of strange waves crossing the moon
https://youtu.be/XkG81QGlJpw?si=xtKoPcPWyHNxEYBV
It might also explain why celestial bodies rotate. Objects with a magentic field suspended in water rotate.
https://youtu.be/PcSOP4bNsrs?si=xYA1CL7qJgm6uSLr
Also, the color of solid (frozen) oxegyn is blue.
There are plenty of holes in this theory, but I am working on it.
Very interesting. I plan to cross Antarctica before I die to figure out the world. I'm sure many questions could be answered by doing this, no matter what I find.