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Re: Earth Gravity Increase after Saturn System Breakup?

No, because the local charge field of the earth opposing gravity will trump the more distant charge field of other planets. Remember, according to Miles, charge drops of by the quad. At the surface of the earth, the charge field lines will be essentially parallel for any local measurement. But at the distance of other planets in an assumed polar configuration, or even at the distance of the moon, the charge field lines of those bodies will have spread out a lot by the time they intersect the earth. Even though the distant bodies might emit more charge flux than the earth, the measured density of the charge field will be dominated by the local field of the earth simply because it hasn't had time to spread out yet. 

 

Another consideration that would need to be taken into account is the orientation of the planets in polar configuration. Are they all lined up pole-to-pole? Or are some line up pole-to-equator? Equator-to-equator? Remembering that the heaviest charge emission is from the equators and the heaviest charge input is at the poles for any body, so any weight increase from external charge coming down would need to maximize its chances by the right orientation to the bombarded body. And even then, I still think that the local field emission is going to win out.


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