NASA will ignite the planet Saturn into a second star in our system
In response to centuries of worship of many gods by many names (Kevon, Molech, and others) the secret organizations such as The Jason Scholars or the Illuminati have placed scientists in key government positions to develop a nuclear deployment system out of the Cassini spacecraft currently orbiting the planet Saturn.
NASA who has been studying the 6 sided corona formed atop the planet’s northern pole since the early 80’s has plans to crash the over 70 lb plutonium payload into the planet’s flammable gas giant’s atmosphere. Similar to the crashing of the Galileo satellite into Jupiter after the study of the Shoemaker-Levy 9 comet broke into 21 uniformly shaped winged pieces and crashed into Jupiter over a period of 7 days. The Jupiter attempt was a test to see how much payload would be required to ignite the planet into a star.
Second star in our system
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Science?
If they did that, wouldnt they have to predict the amount of UV radiation created that could potentially kill us all? Igniting a star so close would also increase a magnetic attratction that would most certainly pull the moon and the Earth out of orbit once it reached a critical density.....
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saturn
Well from wikipedia:
The outer atmosphere of Saturn consists of about 93.2% molecular hydrogen and 6.7% helium. Trace amounts of ammonia, acetylene, ethane, phosphine, and methane have also been detected.[13] The upper clouds on Saturn are composed of ammonia crystals, while the lower level clouds appear to be composed of either ammonium hydrosulfide (NH4SH) or water.[14] The atmosphere of Saturn is significantly deficient in helium relative to the abundance of the elements in the Sun.
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In this respect, yes, it is a prime candidate to "burn" in the fusion state, but, there again, in order for the reaction to be sustainable....a sufficient spark over a very long period of time may be necessary, at least until ice core is melted....The gasses would also have to become much more dense...this seems to be the biggest problem...Interesting!!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saturn
Well from wikipedia:
The outer atmosphere of Saturn consists of about 93.2% molecular hydrogen and 6.7% helium. Trace amounts of ammonia, acetylene, ethane, phosphine, and methane have also been detected.[13] The upper clouds on Saturn are composed of ammonia crystals, while the lower level clouds appear to be composed of either ammonium hydrosulfide (NH4SH) or water.[14] The atmosphere of Saturn is significantly deficient in helium relative to the abundance of the elements in the Sun.
_______________________________________________
In this respect, yes, it is a prime candidate to "burn" in the fusion state, but, there again, in order for the reaction to be sustainable....a sufficient spark over a very long period of time may be necessary, at least until ice core is melted....The gasses would also have to become much more dense...this seems to be the biggest problem...Interesting!!
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