Thank you Ben Davidson for this image capture.
In early January, the American Astronomical Society meeting seems to have been dominated by discussion of a giant wavefront discovered in the neighborhood of our solar system. This giant, undulating wavefront of slightly denser than usual (for interstellar space) gas and dust could just be one of the many Birkeland currents that power our electric universe.
But it seems to be getting pushed by some wave of energy that came from the galactic center. It isn’t very dense so it was difficult to observe, but the astrophysicists believe it is at least 9,000 light years long (and it probably extends in a giant ring all around the disk of the entire galaxy. I suspect it was created by one of many past galactic superwaves, and that the “Radcliffe wave” is just a fragment of just one of many such concentric rings, always expanding outwards from the center of the galaxy.)
Dr. Paul LaViolette noted in the 1980s that all spiral galaxies have cores which seem quiet about 85% of the time, but also have an eruptive phase every so many thousands of years. About 12,500-13,000 years in our case, which matches the evidence for a cycle of catastrophic pole shifts on Earth. While this could be a coincidence, it seems quite plausible that a galactic eruption of light, radiation, gravity waves, and dust capable of leaving behind evidence more than 10,000 years later could be the trigger of pole shifts on Earth.
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4IQB1gMFX5U&w=640&h=360]
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vwQDuuctrwo&w=640&h=360]
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VJLl0gaMlGE&w=640&h=360]
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ln_6TncuUN0&w=480&h=360]