Solar MicroNovae?

Since the word is preanalytical, I also think that the C's spelling it pranalytical was a hint to look into prana (life force) as part of coming up with a mathematical description of consciousness.


That seems to be a very good idea. Networking more about the questions and refining them before asking the C's.


Ben Davidson's micronova theory has been discussed here in other threads. There was also this in the August 27th 2022 session:

(LQB) Does our Sun micronova about every 12,000 years as suggested by Ben Davidson?

A: No

Q: (LQB) If not, how did fission tracks appear in the glass beads brought back from the moon?

A: Other events can cause this.

I thought we already covered Ben Davidson's micronova theory? Did something change?
 
As @Pearce mentioned, the micronova theory of Suspicious0bserver (Ben Davidson) was asked about by @LQB in the August 27th 2022 session:

(LQB) Does our Sun micronova about every 12,000 years as suggested by Ben Davidson?

A: No
How the question was phased might be the problem, may be if it was asked ‘will our sun micro nova?’ we’d get a different response.
 
T Coronae Borealis (T CrB), popularly known as the "Blaze Star," is surely on the verge of a rare and dramatic brightening.

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T Coronae Borealis (T CrB) is about to reappear in the spring night sky, so be ready in case it goes nova.(Image credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab)

This recurrent nova, located approximately 3,000 light-years away in the constellation Corona Borealis, was predicted to explode in a thermonuclear eruption between April and September 2024. For sky-watchers, the failure of the star to suddenly become visible to the naked eye during winter — for the first time since 1946 — is good news because, since September, it's not been visible until the very early hours.

That's changing as its host constellation, Corona Borealis, begins to rise after dark. With a recurrent nova explosion, a very rare event, it's worth finding its patch of sky now in the night sky so you know where to look — and are more easily impressed — when it briefly becomes visible.

So, while it may necessitate staying up late, it's an excellent opportunity for skywatchers to witness the sudden brightening of T CrB — if it happens — before the star fades back into obscurity for another 80 years. With each passing month, it will rise two hours earlier, so it will very soon be an easy nighttime object.

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T CrB will be positioned between two of the brightest stars in the night sky: Vega, rising in the northeast, and Arcturus, rising in the east.

If you can't immediately find those two stars, finding the "Blaze Star" is most easily done by first locating the Big Dipper/Plough, one of the most recognizable patterns in the night sky. Follow the arc of its handle to Arcturus, the fourth brightest star in the sky, shining with an orange hue in the Boötes constellation above the east. Next, locate Vega, a brilliant blue-white star in the Lyra constellation, above north-east
 
How the question was phased might be the problem, may be if it was asked ‘will our sun micro nova?’ we’d get a different response.
Yes, the question is limited to the time asked, so there may be more possibilities.

If you ask if it produces micronovae every 12,000 years, every 10,000, every 7,000, etc. you might get a no.

Does the sun produce micronovae from time to time?
 
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How the question was phased might be the problem, may be if it was asked ‘will our sun micro nova?’ we’d get a different response.
The answer to the second part of the question is that what he considers to be evidence of past Sun micronovas was caused by other events:

(LQB) Does our Sun micronova about every 12,000 years as suggested by Ben Davidson?

A: No

Q: (LQB) If not, how did fission tracks appear in the glass beads brought back from the moon?

A: Other events can cause this.


This does seem to imply that his micronova theory as a whole is incorrect.
 
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