Question:
What conclusion can be surmised by the following data?
.
2007-01-28 01:42:19 UTC
Five years ago quantum physic equations concluded that our G-2 Class Star is far too small to have produced the heavier rare elements found on Earth and in the human body.

This research substantiated that ONLY Blue Supergiant Stars of the B-Class Type and above can produce these heavier rare elements.

Blue Supergiants are extremely hot and fast burning hydrogen stars with a life expectancy of only 10 million years; and at about 9 million years they hyperdialate 100 times their mass into a helium-burning Red Supergiant, a one million year stellar phase that is subsequently followed by a supernova event in which the immense gravity compresses the internal mass of the star into either a neutron star or a black hole, depending on its initial size.

Astrophysicists have recently postulated that based upon calculative frequency of its occurrence throughout the Known Universe that star systems tend to be more so binary and trinary rather than monostellar, that a singular star system is unusually rare; and the conjecture goes on to propose that our Solar System may have a “missing star”.

Ancient cultures such as the Dogon of Mali, Africa have been documented to have had an unusual accurate knowledge of the Sirius Binary, including awareness of the nearly invisible presences of Sirius B, which was not discovered by modern astronomy until 1862. Information of this White Dwarf companion to the immense star Sirius A was handed down to the Dogon from the Ancient Egyptians. In fact, Dogon high priests point to the location of the Sun and state, “that is where Po (Sirius B) used to be.”

Ancient mythology appears to be “cosmocryptography” a symbolic language relaying historical cosmo-cataclysmic events of “stellar interactions”, subsequently responsible for extinction level events and the creation of the Geological Column; and documented by post-catastrophic survivors who were eyewitnesses to the events. The myths suggest a once singular stellar deity (Sirius B as a Blue Supergiant) that received a projectile impact (Comet Metis) that split the star’s photosphere and expelled about 70% of its mass in a mass stellar ejection episode. This event subsequently created the “other gods”, being Sirius A (the “Great Mother Goddess of the Gods”), ten new lesser gods (10 planets, besides the Earth which predated this event), and Sirius C (technically, our Sun, known as the “Great Child God and Hero” that was the last member to be expelled but did not have enough velocity to liberate from Sirius B, and thus established a binary relationship with the paternal star, known as the “Great Father Begetter”).

Furthermore, the mythological record appears to indicate that this former Trinary Stellar System, the Sirian Trichotomy, which is the origin of the “Sacred Triad” in pagan religions, split in half when Sirius B, a diminished star of an F1 Class Type (about 1.5 solar masses), after ultimately reaching the conclusion of its helium Red Giant stellar phase underwent a Nebula Discontinuity Event that created the celestial dynamics that severed the system into two systems.

When the accumulative mass of Sirius A, B, our current Sun and the minimal mass of ten planets is combined into a singular stellar mass, that star would equal the mass of a B-1 Class Star, a Blue Supergiant; the star required to have created the rare heavy elements on the Earth and in the human body.

If it is true that the Sirius Binary is actually our “missing star”, the “missing half” of our Solar System and the above mythological interpretations and cross-supported ancient cultural knowledge is true, then this means all life on Earth had to have emerged, including the intelligent modern human eyewitnesses to the Comet Metis Impact Event, “before” Sirius B, the paternal star, was 9 million years old, for this Blue Supergiant never underwent hyperdialation into a helium-burning Red Supergiant, because it never reached its 9 million year age since the Metis Impact altered the stellar life-cycle of this Blue Supergiant, shrinking its mass into an F-1 Class Star.

How does this affect the Evolution/Uniformitarian Model that stakes its existence on the requirement of 5 billion years before the emergence of modern humans? Quite frankly, I think it completely collapses this hypothesis.
Six answers:
Joshua K.
2007-01-28 03:47:55 UTC
In order for this info to be true There would have to be a forth star!!! In this case that star exploded and created the other three. There's your answer.
Iridflare
2007-01-28 08:40:08 UTC
"Five years ago quantum physic equations concluded that our G-2 Class Star is far too small to have produced the heavier rare elements found on Earth and in the human body."



Who ever said that it did? All the elements after iron in the periodic table were produced in supernovae - there's no mystery there. The sun and planets were formed from the same nebula, the planets weren't created from material produced by the sun.



" "terrestrial heavy elemental integration quantum physics equations" published in 2001."



I've never heard of these - is there a reference?



The Dogon are interesting, but all the indications are that they incorporated knowledge from anthropologists into their myths and legends. There's no proof that their awareness of Sirius B is anything other than modern.



"Red Giant stellar phase underwent a Nebula Discontinuity Event that created the celestial dynamics that severed the system into two systems."



If you mean it produced a planetary nebula then ok, but how did it create those celestial dynamics? Where are all the other examples of this happening?
Labsci
2007-01-28 03:47:40 UTC
If it were true, it would raise some interesting questions. But, it doesn't answer how the heavy elements became so integrated into the Earth in a mere 9 million years or less. Frankly, I believe this escaped sun hypothesis can be dismissed because it contradicts the age of the Earth being 5 billion years old, rather than the other way around. Also, it would also result in the Sun moving away from Sirius at a faster rate or a different angle to the rest of the stars in the region. It is not. I looked at the web site below, which looks to be related to your comments, and it suggests that the Dogon worship an alien amphibian race, which they expect to return. This, I think, suggests that their observations may be less scientific than theological, albeit with some elements of truth.
Sneakers
2007-01-28 02:01:09 UTC
You seem to be making an erronius assumption that the material elements of our planet were created by our current local star.



In fact most of the heavier elements were created in supernovas in the early universe - before the life of our sun even began.
?
2016-05-24 12:09:30 UTC
Hahah. you really had me there for a second, Dr. J. What with all your talk of Independent congressional reviews finding the IPCC's techniques and methods seriously and fundamentally flawed, I figured there must have been some recent development I was unaware of. Then I clicked your link and realized it was just a rehashing of the ages old "hockey stick" garbage. And then I Iol'd.
?
2007-01-28 02:01:02 UTC
Insufficient data to draw a conclusion


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