Fred Hoyle is dead, but it seems Chandra Wickramisinghe has some followers . .



At 10:10 AM 5/8/04, Gary Nunn wrote:


Not sure how I ran across this, but it seems to be an interesting
theory. It was hosted on a  Cornell server.

The links below are for the PDF of this document. If you are interested
in reading the entire document, but can't open a PDF, email me and I
will email you this article as a Word Document.

I have no idea of the scientific accuracy, but the only implausible part
(the me at least) is why didn't the debris disperse in the atmosphere
over the two month period?

Gary


Cometary panspermia explains the red rain of Kerala


Godfrey Louis & A. Santhosh Kumar
School of Pure and Applied Physics, Mahatma Gandhi University,
Kottayam - 686560, Kerala, India.
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Date: October 5, 2003

Red coloured rain occurred in many places of Kerala in India during July
to
September 2001 due to the mixing of huge quantity of microscopic red
cells in the
rainwater. Considering its correlation with a meteor airbust event, this

phenomenon raised an extraordinary question whether the cells are
extraterrestrial. Here we show how the observed features of the red rain

phenomenon can be explained by considering the fragmentation and
atmospheric
disintegration of a fragile cometary body that presumably contains a
dense
collection of red cells. Slow settling of cells in the stratosphere
explains the
continuation of the phenomenon for two months. The red cells under study
appear
to be the resting spores of an extremophilic microorganism. Possible
presence of
these cells in the interstellar clouds is speculated from its similarity
in UV


http://arxiv.org/ftp/astro-ph/papers/0310/0310120.pdf


or

http://tinyurl.com/2sxuh


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-- Ronn! :)



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