The Technology — Part II

In-Depth Discussion of the Technology Elements

A detailed description of the 4 spatial configurations generated by the Iasoberg™ Technology — the iasobergs, celestial subpoints, PNGWSATGA Plane, and tectonic plate boundaries.

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Overview of the 4 Configurations

There are 4 Iasoberg™ Technology spatial configurations that are generated by various algorithms (programs) and displayed on most graphs and charts. The Iasoberg™ (3 band — 3×red and 3×green bands) and the celestial subpoints (sun – red, blue – moon and green – center of the galaxy) are essentially fixed as the Earth rotates through them in a 24-hour period.

The other 2 configurations — the PNGWSATGA Plane and the boundaries of the tectonic plates — obviously rotate with the Earth.

Sequential Hourly Output of Iasoberg™ Technology

Sequential Hourly Output of Iasoberg™ Technology

Configuration 1 — The Iasobergs

The term iasoberg™ was coined as the generic descriptor of the regions where the Iasoberg™ Technology output intersects the Earth's surface to indicate the influence of the Allais Effect. Initially, an Iasoberg™ was displayed as a line on the Earth's surface to indicate its location.

The early Technology consisted of 4 iasobergs™ (lines): two associated with the Sun and two with the center of the galaxy. The solar iasobergs™ were focused at the barycenter of the Earth-Moon system and the anti-barycenter — a point on the Earth-Moon axis opposite to the barycenter and at the same distance from the center of the Earth to the barycenter. The galactic iasobergs™ were configured similarly to the solar iasobergs.

Prior to a study of severe wind events in August 2008, 2 additional iasobergs™ had been developed to provide additional intersections on the Earth's surface for investigating links between events and the output of the Technology. These two additional iasobergs™ were styled the Solar Earth Centric and Galactic Earth Centric iasobergs, focused at the mass center of the Earth. The geometry of these iasobergs™ was as per the initial 4.

The lines were further developed into 3 bands for each iasoberg. The 3-band Iasoberg™ was developed as an exploratory representation of the observations recorded in the Saxl and Allen experiment (1970) and the 3 clusters of severe events described in the severe wind study.

See Iasoberg™ type
reference table below

Display Colour Coding

Sun subpoint Red
Moon subpoint Blue
Galaxy centre subpoint Green
Solar Fundamental Iasoberg Dark red dots
Solar Mirror Image Iasoberg Light red dots
Earth Centric Solar Iasoberg Vertical lines
Tectonic plate boundaries Yellow dots
Iasospot 1 — PNG Magenta polygon
Iasospot 2 — WSA Cyan polygon
PNGWSATGA Plane Red line (great circle)
Iasoberg™ Name Focus Point Link Display
Solar Fundamental Iasoberg
3 bands
Earth-Moon System Barycenter Sun Dark red dots
Solar Mirror Image Iasoberg
3 bands
Anti-barycenter Sun Light red dots
Earth Centric Solar Iasoberg
3 bands
Center of the Earth Sun Vertical lines
Galactic Fundamental Iasoberg
3 bands
Earth-Moon System Barycenter Galaxy Centre Dark green dots
Galactic Mirror Image Iasoberg
3 bands
Anti-barycenter Galaxy Centre Light green dots
Earth Centric Galactic Iasoberg
3 bands
Center of the Earth Galaxy Centre Vertical green lines

Configuration 2 — Celestial Subpoints

Next, we have 3 points which are included in all displays; they are the subpoints of the Sun (red), Moon (blue) and center of the galaxy (green). The subpoint is where the axis between the above celestial body and the center of the Earth intersects the surface of the Earth.

We have found in some of our work that their location in conjunction with the iasobergs™ have correlated with observations and reports of various geophysical events.

Sun · Moon · Galaxy
subpoints shown on
all maps & charts

Configuration 3 — The PNGWSATGA Plane

The PNGWSATGA Plane is a great circle shown as a red line on all maps and charts. It includes two special geographic regions called iasospots.

PNGWSATGA — Acronym Breakdown
PNGPapua New Guinea
WSAWestern South America
TGATerrestrial Gravitational Anomaly

The elements associated with the PNGWSATGA Plane (great circle shown as a red line) include iasospots — Iasospot 1 (PNG Magenta polygon) and Iasospot 2 (WSA cyan polygon) — which are shown in all maps and charts.

The polygons represent two regions of the Earth where there are significant terrestrial gravitational anomalies. Two additional elements have been included in the PNGWSATGA Plane configuration as a result of severe weather event observations. They are planes that are orthogonal to the PNGWSATGA plane and intersect the PNGWSATGA plane at the centroids of the PNG and WSA polygons.

Iasospot 1 — PNG
Magenta polygon

Iasospot 2 — WSA
Cyan polygon

Configuration 4 — Tectonic Plate Boundaries

Finally, in some maps you will also see lines of yellow dots which represent the boundaries of Earth's tectonic plates. These boundaries rotate with the Earth and indicate the location of major mass concentrations near the Earth's surface.

Tectonic boundaries
shown as
Yellow dots

Theoretical Implications & Software

At this stage there is no established rationale for the distortion of the solar and galactic gravitational fields focused at the barycenter and anti-barycenter of the Earth-Moon system and mass center of the Earth. However, if the above fields are distorted, as hypothesized, that is one way field theory can accommodate non-homogeneous gravitational vectors on the Earth's surface that emanate from the above points within the Earth.

The iasobergs™ (hypothetical distorted gravitational potentials), the subpoints and regions near them (m1 × m2/r²), the TGAs — because of more mass in those regions of the Earth — and the tectonic plates which indicate the boundaries of large masses near the Earth's surface are dynamically linked.

It is my contention that these elements contribute to the dynamics that influence our terrestrial environment. It is important to note that some of these elements are constantly moving relative to each other, in some instances in excess of 1,600 km/hr!

Iasoberg.com has a series of algorithms (programs) developed by my brother and myself which can generate the locations for these hypothesized distortions very accurately for any instant of time between 2500 BC to 2500 AD.

All the features presented on maps reflecting the output of the Iasoberg™ Technology are subject to the dynamics of gravity.

Technology range:
2500 BC – 2500 AD

Further Reading

←Technology Overview What is a Barycenter? BLOG