The Sun is electric..and postures many difficult idents which science is trying to underdstand.
An Electric Universe article on Superflares...ie..both Sun and Gas giants may flare *off ..quantum electron jump between planets and our Sun.
riduculed by mainstream science..this may occur..
Jupiters great spot may be a emmision /expulsion scar from the past..ie..Jupiter fissioned a child...a Moon?..several maybe?
are the moons of Jupiter and Saturn..their moons..origen to them..and not the Accretion disc hypothesis?
SUPERFLARES
By Wal Thornhill
The following news item should be of interest.
It supports the idea, first proposed by Velikovsky I think, that proto-Saturn as a minor star suffered a brilliant flare-up. [The usual meaningless magnetic model of the cause of a solar flare is invoked in the article: "magnetic fields between a star and a large planet, or another star, can wrap around each other until they snap, erupting in a superflare."]
In the Electric Universe model, what we are seeing is simply a violent stellar electrical discharge. It is a normal response of a star (or a gas giant) to a strong gravitational disturbance and/or rapid change in the electrical environment. It is the usual birth notice of a new planet.
In proto-Saturn's case, the entry into the solar plasmasphere would have required rapid adjustment to the new electrical environment where the Sun was the main focus of electrical activity. As I have mentioned before, this would have resulted in a massive cometary coma, centred on proto-Saturn. And in the same way that comets have material machined electrically from their nucleus in the form of "jets", so Saturn would have begun spewing matter into space like a spinning garden sprinkler. The article also mentions the expected powerful auroral effects. These too I would expect in the proto-Saturn system.
In my opinion the massive flare-up that Velikovsky identified would more than likely have occurred when proto-Saturn encountered the plasmasphere of one of the gas giant planets in the Sun's entourage at the time. Like Dwardu, I think that the simplest and most likely candidate was Jupiter. Such an encounter would allow a cataclysmic charge exchange (superflare) followed by a drastic modification of orbits.
If our own Sun had been observed by distant alien scientists when Saturn flared, would they too have attributed the outburst to the Sun because Saturn was too close to the Sun to be distinguished as a separate body? The following report is based on historical records of flare-ups and it has only been possible in the last few years to resolve a few objects the size of hypothesised proto-Saturn, close to a nearby star.
If I'm not mistaken, the 9 superflares identified over the past 100 years suggest that the catastrophic recent history of our own planetary system is not unusual. So the complacency of scientists about our situation is based largely on ignorance.