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полная версияThe Future of Our Earth

Zaki Klysh
The Future of Our Earth

Полная версия

Our Sun, like the Earth, rotates around its own axis. But what is this energy that rotates even the Sun? Unknown energy, what is it?

Questions, questions…

Maybe it all started like this.

Clumps of matter formed in the universe, which, possessing enormous energy, rotated very quickly.

The mass determined what the further evolution of this matter would lead to. The huge mass of this matter led to the formation of stars.

But this small mysterious matter, rotating, became the inner center-core of the planet, then due to gravity, the nearby substance from the gas-dust cloud was attracted.

All this seems incredible, but try to discard the emotions and understand it.

The core of a planet is some kind of matter containing enormous energy, as a result of which the core rotates.

Over time, the material that makes up the core of the planet will decrease.

This will lead to a decrease in the energy of the core, and accordingly gravity will be less able to hold the surrounding material. Thus, the planet will increase in size.

Expanding, the crust of the ancient Earth ruptured, which led to the appearance of perhaps one supercontinent. Next, a supercontinent or 2-3 continents formed landmass. The rifts filled with water, because the primitive planet was a single ocean.

As long as there is energy in the core that is capable of rotating all layers of the Earth, the planet remains alive. But what will happen next? And then, when all the energy is used up and the expansion of the Earth stops, this will lead to the disappearance of the magnetic field, although it will make itself felt for a long time.

Perhaps the Moon had such a fate. The inner core was small and the expansion that was on Earth did not happen. The core substance was used up. Maybe that's why when the Americans dropped a cargo on the Moon, there was an echo, as if there was a void inside.

Maybe it was a cavity that was considered the core of the Moon?

But what is this substance, or what particles, that make up the inner core?

The discovery of this unknown matter could lead to disaster if, simply under terrestrial conditions, these particles are searched for somewhere in the laboratory. This matter is dangerous because it will begin to absorb everything that surrounds it.

Consider the nearest planets. Mars is smaller than Earth, so the inner core was small. If we follow our reasoning, there was a magnetic field, but with the expenditure of internal matter, it was lost.

Venus is comparable in size to Earth, but it practically does not rotate around its axis, which suggests that perhaps the planet's internal energy has already been used up. And one of the reasons for such a rapid loss of internal energy, it can be assumed, is due to the fact that Venus is closer to the Sun.

It turns out that the Earth is not eternal either. How long do we have left? That is, the Earth will turn into the Moon, Mars?

And when will this happen? Maybe it’s all fairy tales and fiction and not worth even thinking about?

But as they say, forewarned means armed.

The inner core of the Earth, the most mysterious and little-studied formation.

At the end of the twentieth century, scientists proposed ways to detect rotation by changing the characteristics of seismic waves. Calculations have shown that this gives 1 degree of additional rotation per year.

Maybe in the future, we will find out that the rotation of the inner core is the energy that makes the Earth alive.

During the formation of the planets, unknown matter was unevenly distributed around the primary Sun.

The Earth, Moon, Mars and other planets had this material in varying quantities.

There was more of this unknown substance in the inner core of the Earth than in the Moon. Therefore, the future planet, due to gravity, attracted more material from the gas and dust cloud than the Moon. Rotating, these two cores formed the Earth and the Moon.

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