Monday, August 26, 2024

The Cygnus Dyson Sphere (Part 1)

I theorized that light traveling from any distant star outside of our own solar system could be treated as a form of data transmission from the source due to the fact that we can see a distant star's light with our own eyes here on Earth, and the development of commercial products that produce the same effect such as fiber optic cables. That is the easiest way to think about what distant stars are doing when their light generation is traveling across the universe and crossing the paths of planets like Earth.

The first candidate for this theory was Cygnus KIC 8462852 because an astronomer named Tabetha Boyajian observed that the star was dimming in measurable cycles that could not be explained. Some input into why this dimming occurred was dust surrounding the star, the potential that a sun disk in early star formation was causing the light transmission from the star to dim periodically, that there was a large debris field or asteroid belt causing the dimming, or even the potential for a Dyson Sphere to be operating near the star which would cause the dimming as some of the explanations. Now, for a star to dim to the degree that KIC 8462852 was dimming, years ago I decided to approach the unanswered question as an intelligent highly advanced extraterrestrial species or alliance of extraterrestrial species working together and building a Dyson Sphere near the star, much to the consternation of western science.

The best way to prove it, as I have done, is to show images of it from start to finish so you can see for yourself. Let's travel to Cygnus KIC 8462852 and see it together.

This is the source image that I used which was derived from a professional telescope based on Earth that was taking images of the Cygnus region and publishing the images in databases. I have Cygnus KIC 8462852 in the red box.


Then I isolated the candidate star before processing it to determine what was causing the dimming of the star.


The next step was to carefully zoom in on the star without damaging the data we were looking for, so we wanted to avoid any pixelation from the professional telescope image. This would allow us to create unlimited primary source working slides of the image to test our imaging technology and procedures to refine and enhance them. 


With the primary working source image above, the next sequence in the analysis took years to develop. Basically what I wanted to do initially was to reduce the sunlight emitted from Cygnus KIC 8462852 in such a way as to reveal what was facing Earth without being drowned out by the sunlight. I surmised if there was a facility there built by extraterrestrials, the facility would have multiple layers of elevation which could be focused upon using our imaging procedures. So I spent a long time working on this problem but accomplished it with success.

Phase One


Phase Two


Phase Three


Now we can see what is in front of the star without the star's own light drowning it out. You have to remember that light completely embraces matter, so to see heavy mass satellites like planets, moons and other objects like Dyson Spheres in detail down to the meter, you have to filter the background light to reduce the source light. In the image you can clearly see the elevation of intelligently designed structures facing Earth at the time the source image was taken. I say that in advance because the next series of images I am going to show you will prove the extraterrestrial origin.

Not only that, in a follow-on post I am going to show you the extraterrestrials themselves working inside the facility they have built down to a one-meter scale. This will be the first time in the history of the human race that this information will be seen, so make sure to read the next parts of this blog entry. I am going to publish the image of the extraterrestrials inside an observation area of the Dyson Sphere.

This scientific article will continue with The Cygnus Dyson Sphere (Part 2).



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