Nope. It's gotta be our fault the sun gets hotter.
The corona is hot, but it’s also very rarefied, so it does not represent a great reservoir of energy. When they mention magnetism, it makes me think this is some sort of compression process where the magnetic field puts the squeeze on some trapped plasma and shoots it up into the corona. Hey, great theory, I like it.
I am getting 40 meter shortwave like gang busters in the AM and 30 meter is booming at night
The old mystery seems to be on the verge of unraveling.
And once again, nature may be showing us the way: If a 6000°C plasma and some, as yet, not fully understood magnetic process can drive temperatures up to several million degrees, you’ve got to sit up and take notice. A complete understanding could, conceivably, point the way to controlled fusion.
It’s hotter in my attic than in my basement.
Scientists need to recall that iron loses its magnetism abot 770 degrees C. The extreme heat of the corona will not be explained by “magnetic reconnection”, a phenomena that has not been repeated in the laboratory and remains the theoretical result of mathematical modeling, not reality. Astronomers will one day come to the correct conclusion that the sun is electrical in nature, a ball of plasma powered by the galactic Birkland Currents which comprise the spiral arms. 99% of all matter in the universe is in the plasma state and where you have plasma you have electricity and when you have electricity, you have magnetism.
Birkland Currents pinch and self-organize due to the magnetism they create. At high current levels, they Z-pinch into nodes and that is where star formation actually occurs. Planetary disk accretion cannot account for the hundreds of anomalies in the Solar System that are swept under the rug, whereas the electrical model can account for those anomalies.
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