This is just a real long shot...please bear with me. I just received Cater's
book today in the mail, so I have yet to read it, I'm just going by what I've
read on the net so far. I did read "Olaf's" story though.
Could there possibly be a way that the Sun's rays, after coming through the
surface of the Earth, converge in the center of the earth, similar to the way
a magnifying glass concentrates the Sun's energy, onto a solid object in the
center, therefore illuminating it, and acting more like a moon giving off
light, and fading in and out on the inside as the Earth revolves around it.
After all, if the Earth is supposed to be hollow and more like a geode,
wouldn't that mean the inner part is more crystal like, acting more like a
prism with the Sun light that makes it through, and maybe causing it to
concentrate in the center?
Just a wild idea. Let me know what you think, I have thick skin.
A model has to explain all aspects. How would such a model account for
invisible rays shooting out of the polar openings to cause the auroral
display?
The Earth is like a geode in the sense of shape. I don't know how far you
can taike the analogy.
Dean
This is just a real long shot...please bear with me. I just received
Cater's
book today in the mail, so I have yet to read it, I'm just going by what
I've
read on the net so far. I did read "Olaf's" story though.
Could there possibly be a way that the Sun's rays, after coming through
the
surface of the Earth, converge in the center of the earth, similar to the
way
a magnifying glass concentrates the Sun's energy, onto a solid object in
the
center, therefore illuminating it, and acting more like a moon giving off
light, and fading in and out on the inside as the Earth revolves around
it.
ยทยทยท
After all, if the Earth is supposed to be hollow and more like a geode,
wouldn't that mean the inner part is more crystal like, acting more like a
prism with the Sun light that makes it through, and maybe causing it to
concentrate in the center?
Just a wild idea. Let me know what you think, I have thick skin.