The reason capacitors can repeatedly discharge, and yet maintain an electric potential difference between their anodes and cathodes, is because they are plugged into an external source of energy. So where does all the electricity in our solar system come from? […]
In simpler terms, what Longo concluded was that the rotation axes of galaxies are aligned along the same curve and that this alignment could not be due to random chance. Along with Longo […] have all strongly suggested that the alignment of galactic rotation axes is due to a giant ring of electric current. Although the ultimate source of this giant electric ring circling the cosmic ‘void’ is still unknown, the alignment of the galaxies’ rotation axes is indirect proof of its existence. […]
This giant ring of Birkeland current (see next chapter: ‘interstellar plasma’) may be the external source of energy that powers galaxies. It may also explain the ‘handedness’ addressed by Longo in his paper, by electrically inducing a specific direction and speed of rotation in the galaxies located along its current. As shown in figure 17, intragalactic space seems to follow the same process as intergalactic space.
The galactic jet (green jet in the center of figure 17) is a massive Birkeland current coming from the intergalactic current ring (the one described above that aligns galaxies with each other), which enters the galaxy through its core and spreads through the galactic arms. Just as the current between galaxies may explain their alignment and same rotation direction, the current within galaxies may explain why most stars are located with galactic arms, i.e. along the galaxies own electric current. […]
In addition to aligning galaxies along the ‘intergalactic ring’ and making them spin, as well as grouping the stars within galaxies along galactic arms, Birkeland currents may also be the external electric source that powers the stars themselves and makes them spin. In their turn, stars may be the external electric source that powers planets and makes them spin. […]
From the observations listed above, it seems that celestial bodies are electrically powered by external electric sources in a cascading fashion. The intergalactic void powers the galaxies, aligns them and makes them spin. In turn, the galaxies align the stars, power them and make them spin. Finally the stars power the planets and make them spin.