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November 18, 1997: Theories of the Sun - Charles Cagle

November 18, 1997: Theories of the Sun - Charles Cagle

The Art Bell Archive · Arthur William Bell III

December 22, 20231h 57m

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Show Notes

Art Bell interviews self-educated physicist Charles Cagle, a Vietnam veteran and former commercial fisherman whose research into ball lightning led him to a sweeping theory connecting solar activity to catastrophic Earth changes. Cagle explains how ball lightning forms a stable plasma structure capable of sustaining fusion reactions, something billions of dollars in laboratory research has failed to achieve. He connects this phenomenon to the sun''s coronal mass ejections, which he describes as magnetotoroidal bubbles that maintain their structure across 93 million miles of space.

Cagle presents evidence that coronal mass ejections strike Earth more frequently than random chance would predict and warns that Solar Cycle 23, then just beginning, shows signs of becoming the most powerful ever recorded. He explains that a sufficiently strong ejection could overwhelm Earth''s magnetic field and trigger a pole reversal, a process geological records show has occurred at least 171 times since the Jurassic period.

The most alarming predictions involve the consequences of such a reversal. Cagle describes how the loss of Earth''s protective magnetic field would expose the planet to direct solar bombardment, while internal forces could generate massive earthquakes exceeding Richter 10 and cause volcanic island chains like Hawaii to rapidly subside beneath the ocean.