Post by plutronus on Apr 19, 2013 15:11:32 GMT -6
All suspected ET objects emit radiation. Its how we know that the objects are present, if they didn't emit something Humans would not know of the object's presence.
Its a matter of what folks introspect as being 'radiation'. From the physics perspective, if a thing is electrical in nature, (everything physical is), it emits radiation because it is electrical. But most folks in the UFO chat-rooms perceive 'radiation' as that stuff that comes from a nuclear reactor or from a decaying isotope material, or magically from a flying-saucer 'UFO', et cetera. The stuff that a Geiger-Counter can measure.
Lots of things emit radiation, one for instance, the radio transmitter such as the transmitter inside your cell-phone, it emits radio wavelength radiation, but unless the transmitter power is super-powerful on the order of 1000s of megaWatts or 1000s of eV, (GSM cell-phone transmitters emit around 2 Watts RF), the energy emitted by the cell-phone does not ionize anything nor will it cause surrounding materials such as your pants pocket to become nuclear radioactive.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mobile_phone_radiation_and_health)
Since ionizing energy or nuclear energy radiation, the stuff that is measurable using a Geiger-counter, is nearly aways emitted from brilliantly glowing ET objects, so the notion that there isn't any radiation, becomes a matter of where one encounters an alien object. If the object transits close to the ground, hovers, or lands, or operates down among the trees, the energy being imparted into the Earthian environment is typically so energetically powerful, that it nearly ALWAYS causes the surrounding material to become nuclear radioactive. This is known as 'ionizing radiation'. EM radiation that emits from ionized matter nucleus, is called "gamma ray" radiation.
The distinction between X-rays and gamma rays is partly based on where it comes from, --the photons generated from nuclear decay or other nuclear and sub-nuclear/particle process, are always gamma rays, whereas X-rays are generated by electron transitions involving highly energetic inner valence atomic electrons. In general, nuclear transitions are much more energetic than electronic transitions, so gamma-rays typically have more energy than X-rays. Alien objects impart energy into the environment which as a process artifact, causes both X-ray and gamma ray emissions, while simultaneously causing surrounding matter to become radioactive which then also emits short life-span alpha, beta particles and gamma rays.
If the sighted object is way up there, at high altitude, only the direct energy emissions from the object are directly detectable on the ground below, which is generally instrument observable as multi-spectral IR, radiometric and photonic (non-ionizing/nuclear) gamma/xray radiation while the emitted energy diminishes by the square of the distance from the object, so that by the time the radiation is close to Humans on the ground, it is no longer typically of sufficient energy to ionize surrounding materials. However, the surrounding atmosphere in close proximity to the object way-up-there is very likely becoming radioactive, however short-lived it may be.
In virtually every landing, nuclear ionizing 'radioactivity' is the signature employed by ET object investigators to verify that a landing actually occurred. These objects ionize the surrounding material, it is why the soil beneath the craft, after the object departs often glows.
In my "UFO Detector" system that I am fabricating (as time permits), the sensor suite includes a solid-state gamma ray detector among other sensors.
plutronus
Its a matter of what folks introspect as being 'radiation'. From the physics perspective, if a thing is electrical in nature, (everything physical is), it emits radiation because it is electrical. But most folks in the UFO chat-rooms perceive 'radiation' as that stuff that comes from a nuclear reactor or from a decaying isotope material, or magically from a flying-saucer 'UFO', et cetera. The stuff that a Geiger-Counter can measure.
Lots of things emit radiation, one for instance, the radio transmitter such as the transmitter inside your cell-phone, it emits radio wavelength radiation, but unless the transmitter power is super-powerful on the order of 1000s of megaWatts or 1000s of eV, (GSM cell-phone transmitters emit around 2 Watts RF), the energy emitted by the cell-phone does not ionize anything nor will it cause surrounding materials such as your pants pocket to become nuclear radioactive.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mobile_phone_radiation_and_health)
Since ionizing energy or nuclear energy radiation, the stuff that is measurable using a Geiger-counter, is nearly aways emitted from brilliantly glowing ET objects, so the notion that there isn't any radiation, becomes a matter of where one encounters an alien object. If the object transits close to the ground, hovers, or lands, or operates down among the trees, the energy being imparted into the Earthian environment is typically so energetically powerful, that it nearly ALWAYS causes the surrounding material to become nuclear radioactive. This is known as 'ionizing radiation'. EM radiation that emits from ionized matter nucleus, is called "gamma ray" radiation.
The distinction between X-rays and gamma rays is partly based on where it comes from, --the photons generated from nuclear decay or other nuclear and sub-nuclear/particle process, are always gamma rays, whereas X-rays are generated by electron transitions involving highly energetic inner valence atomic electrons. In general, nuclear transitions are much more energetic than electronic transitions, so gamma-rays typically have more energy than X-rays. Alien objects impart energy into the environment which as a process artifact, causes both X-ray and gamma ray emissions, while simultaneously causing surrounding matter to become radioactive which then also emits short life-span alpha, beta particles and gamma rays.
If the sighted object is way up there, at high altitude, only the direct energy emissions from the object are directly detectable on the ground below, which is generally instrument observable as multi-spectral IR, radiometric and photonic (non-ionizing/nuclear) gamma/xray radiation while the emitted energy diminishes by the square of the distance from the object, so that by the time the radiation is close to Humans on the ground, it is no longer typically of sufficient energy to ionize surrounding materials. However, the surrounding atmosphere in close proximity to the object way-up-there is very likely becoming radioactive, however short-lived it may be.
In virtually every landing, nuclear ionizing 'radioactivity' is the signature employed by ET object investigators to verify that a landing actually occurred. These objects ionize the surrounding material, it is why the soil beneath the craft, after the object departs often glows.
In my "UFO Detector" system that I am fabricating (as time permits), the sensor suite includes a solid-state gamma ray detector among other sensors.
plutronus