File: Tornados.txt Date: 15Jun2008 To view this file, right click -> View source, then use Notepad to Format -> Word Wrap Spawning. I was listening to the television (I think The Weather Channel) about the formation of tornados. Later I heard a similar but more detailed account on The Science Channel on 29 May 2008. They seemed to be very puzzled about the whole phenomena, but at the same time they seemed to be leaving out important aspects that should clarify the process or make it a little more obvious what is going on. They didn't seem to be talking about the initial development of rapidly rotating nuclear ground states about their own nearly horizontal axes (and also highly rotating molecular ground states of water rotating about horizontal axes) in the formation and futher heating via the Bessler principle of the warm moist supercells. Rotation of the warm moist air starts the ground states to rotating about their own horizontal axes. It was mentioned that storms tended to spawn stronger tornados when they were spawned between 4PM and 8PM. They didn't explain why that was the case. The rapidly rotating nuclear ground states rotating about nearly horizontal axes need to be transformed to highly rotating ground states rotating about their own individual nearly vertical axes. With the sun in such positions, horizontal with respect to the sun could be nearly vertical with respect to us. The researchers might want to study the angle that the nearly horizontal axis of the rotating warm moist air in the pre-tornados makes with respect to the direction to the sun (ie. vertical with respect to the sun) with respect to effectiveness of spawning tornados. The researchers must include the power from the Earth via gravitons and the power from the sun via gravitons in their models, if they ever want to develop more accurate tornado spawning and power prediction models. They can't just keep ignoring these important sources of power. AEP - 30 May 2008 The tornado researchers need to also include the Bessler principle influence of the Moon in addition to that of the Earth and the Sun when they do their models. Gravitons come from all these bodies. The intensity of gravitons coming from a body should be proportional to the mass of that body divided by the square of the distance from the center of that body. That is the usual expression that one normally encounters when dealing with gravity. What is different is the dependence of the "speedup" torques on the rotating masses encountered by the gravitons. The rotating nuclear ground states tend to have angular velocities close to the internal angular velocities of the masses in which they are embedded (or the internal angular velocities of the air/moisture that they are within). Basically consider just the effective component of the angular velocity (that is perpendicular to the direction that the graviton is coming from). The torque applied depends on the angles that the two parts of the gravitons being absorbed (by their opposite charges) make. The angles are with respect to the incoming direction of the graviton and the absorption points on the approximate circle. The center of the approximate circle is at the midpoint between the two charges with the diameter approximately being the distance between the two charges. The absorption points often are not on a single diameter of the approximate circle since the absorptions often do not occur at the same time. Measurements of the angular velocities dependencies may be quicker than going through the calculations. If I get some time, I could try to do the calculations and come up with some approximate expressions. Maybe someone else will or already has gone through these calculations. AEP - 11 Jun 2008 Sounds. Some tornados have made a sound that some people describe is like a freight train. I don't think that this similarity is accidental. The railroad wheels/axles have nuclear ground states rotating rapidly about their own internal horizontal axes. The lowest portions of vertical tilted tornados have nuclear ground states rapidly rotating about their own internal vertical axes. See my internal file Railroads.txt AEP - 30 May 2008 ---------- To: Dr. Joshua Wurman jwurman@ou.edu School of Meteorology University of Oklahoma 100 East Boyd Room 1422 Norman, OK 73019 405-325-0589 (voice), 405-325-7689 (fax) jwurman@ou.edu http://aaron.ou.edu/dow/ Sub: Tornado spawning and power via Bessler principle CC: admin@cswr.org; LA4Park@iwvisp.com Center for Severe Weather Research 1945 Vassar Circle, Boulder, CO 80305 720-304-9100 (voice), 720-304-0900 (fax) | admin@cswr.org Dear Dr. Wurman, I suggest that you incorporate knowledge about the Bessler principle, if you want to get a handle on tornado spawning and eventual better models for the prediction of tornado strength. See the file Tornados.txt found at my URL of http://www1.iwvisp.com/LA4Park/ that is see http://www1.iwvisp.com/LA4Park/Tornados.txt . I think that you will begin to make better sense of the puzzle when you begin to include the presence of rotating ground states (including rotating nuclear ground states) in prediction models and the effect that gravitons have on such via the Bessler principle. If you want a demonstration of the Bessler principle, attach magnets to the ends of a horizontal axle and with modern high temperature superconductors, which exclude all magnetic fields, form a very low friction bearing. Don't let it rotate too fast though, for safety sake. For more discussion of the Bessler principle, see the information about it on http://www1.iwvisp.com/LA4Park/ especially noting the theory about why it works and the circa 1968 McKinley low friction demonstration. Your Doppler on Wheels radar won't allow you to directly measure the internal angular velocities of the nuclear ground states, but there are interactions between the two (measured and unmeasured). For example, at six PM, on a full or new moon, a vertical tornado will pick up strength from the gravitons coming from the sun and the moon by interaction with highly rotating nuclear ground states that are rotating about their own internal vertical axes (locally vertical with respect to the earth but horizontal with respect to the sun and the moon) and this power is transferred to the air, debris, dust, moisture, etc. that the nuclear ground states are "embedded" in. It does this by photons bouncing off each other so as to tend to equalize the internal angular velocities of the nuclear ground states and the measurable macroscopic "air" currents that they are embedded in. One must not neglect this power source if one wants to really understand what is going on inside of a tornado. Please don't neglect it. Sincerely yours, Alden Park - 14 Jun 2008 LA4Park@iwvisp.com Ridgecrest, California ---------- Use Back on browser to return to Main or go to http://www1.iwvisp.com/LA4Park/ or http://mysite.verizon.net/aldlin/ (all after exiting, if in "View source" mode).