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The Mind of James Donahue Space Mystery  | 
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                Strange Blue Ring Around Jupiter It started in late February when an amateur astronomer
                  in  This substance, which quickly turned blue, seemed to spew
                  up from out of the planet's gaseous core like a cloud of smoke would do from a major forest fire or volcanic eruption on
                  Earth. As astronomers watched, it slowly spread until it formed a ring that appears to circle the planet. Astronomers are watching these developments closely, noting
                  that nothing like this has ever been seen on Jupiter. The new blue band is so wide it is said it could easily measure three
                  to four times the diameter of Earth. Jupiter is, indeed, a mystery planet in our solar system.
                  Even though we have sent several space probes to study and photograph this giant orb up close and personal, we still do not
                  know if it is a ball of gas or if there is solid matter at its core.  Thus the speculations are running wide as to the cause
                  of the blue ring. Astronomer David Reneke, consulting editor of Sky and
                  Space Magazine, obviously believes in the solid matter theory. He suggests that the ring is caused by a volcanic eruption
                  or some other natural disturbance on the surface. One observer on an Internet bulletin board said he read
                  a story about NASA nuking Jupiter and asked if that might be the cause of the ring. Perhaps that writer is on to something. Remember the mystery
                  dark spot on Jupiter, somewhere in that same Southern Hemispheric area, that had scientists baffled in about October, 2003?
                  If you go to Aaron C. Donahue's web site and look at his data file, you will see that Aaron and his sister Jennifer Sharpe did remote viewing sessions to determine what caused
                  that dark spot. Their conclusion: a man-made object crashed into the planet. What man-made object could that have been? Easy to conclude
                  it was the old Galileo spacecraft that had been circling Jupiter for years, sending data to NASA. Galileo was purposely put
                  on a collision course with Jupiter because the onboard propellant was nearly depleted. The NASA team felt that letting it
                  crash into Jupiter was a better idea than taking a chance that it would go out of control and hit Jupiter's moon, Europa,
                  which appears to have a surface ocean.  It was reasoned that there was a better chance of life
                  existing on Europa than on Jupiter, so the craft was sent on its final mission into the depth of the gas giant on September
                  21, only weeks before the mystery black spot was noticed. But did Galileo carry plutonium or any other material
                  that might have caused a nuclear explosion? I have been researching that space craft for a few days and find no evidence of
                  it. But NASA has used plutonium in space craft. The Cassini space craft, launched in 1997, was designed
                  for a long-range mission past Venus, Jupiter and eventually going to Saturn. In fact, Cassini is, even as I write this, approaching
                  Saturn and sending back a range of interesting pictures. Cassini was strongly opposed at the time of its launch
                  because it carried a payload of 72 pounds of Plutonium Dioxide, used to keep the ship's electrical system operating for the
                  duration of a very long flight. But while the isotope of plutonium used in Cassini is considered highly radioactive and deadly
                  to any life form that comes in contact with it, I find no indication that it constitutes any kind of bomb, or that the ship
                  itself could ever explode. And as far as I know, Cassini is still in space, still
                  a working ship, and has never collided with anything.  Thus the blue streak remains an unexplained mystery. We
                  might assume, however, that since Galileo crashed into the planet at about that same place, it had something to do with changing
                  the chemical structure of Jupiter and producing that interesting blue ring. Remember that the Schumacher Comet also created several
                  dark spots on Jupiter when it broke into pieces and struck the planet in about 1997. There was no blue ring at that time. Have we damaged the planet? We may never know. I am troubled
                  by the fact that human tinkering is starting to have an impact on everything in our solar system, not just Earth anymore.  | 
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