Alpha-Theta
Superior

ª×µ»ƒ³²² 694 posts, May 2002
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posted 08-01-2002 07:11 PM
http://www.enterprisemission.com/
The following is taken from an article on the Enterprise Mission website: What we have been hoping to accomplish here at Enterprise is to raise an awareness within the scientific community of the potential of Hyperdimensional physics. If we can get enough heavy hitters among the physics professionals to take an honest look at the Hyperdimensional model and it's potential to explain many of the intractable problems of conventional physics, we can perhaps avert the disaster alluded to in Carter's storyAnd we may have received some help recently from our old pal SOHO. On September 22nd, 1999, the space probes LASCO instrument recorded a stunning, indisputably "Hyperdimensional" eruption on the sun. This incredible image, sent to us by two independent sources, Ken Robb in Hawaii and John from "Harbingers Skywatch", shows nothing less than a Hyperdimensional beam emanating from the sun. (Notice also the X-Ray and Magnetometer readings from Harbinger's Skywatch site on the charts from GEOS.) The helical, rotating beam is emerging from somewhere near the south polar region. "Shock diamonds" are clearly visible, probably as the energy passes through the superheated plasma in the corona. It is impossible to tell for certain just where the origin is because of the occulting disk of the LASCO camera. As Hoagland outlined in his Hyperdimensional physics paper, as we get closer to a major shift in the harmonics of the solar system, we should begin to see inconsistencies in the so-called "solar constant." According to Hoagland, we should begin to see this "Hyperdimensional transfer mechanism" output as rotating vorticular emissions from both the planets and the sun. He even listed this as his proposed "second test" of Hyperdimensional physics. (end article)
 Look at the 'shock diamonds' in the magnetic beam in this picture.... Now look at the 'shock diamonds in the exhaust of this sr71:  Not technology we have though, right??
[Edited 8 times, lastly by Alpha-Theta on 08-01-2002] 
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