Baryonium Dark Matter: Events with Circle Configurations in the Atmosphere and on the Surface of Earth
O. I. Piskounova
公開日: 2023/9/26
Abstract
This research supposes the parallel study of the manifestations of Baryonium Dark Matter (BDM) in astroparticle collisions in the atmosphere and among the footprints of the massive extraterrestrial objects that fall on the surface of Earth. These objects differ from stone asteroids and are seen as lightning bolides that are burning with a blue flame. Since BDM is a QCD state, the characteristics of BDM disintegration events can be analyzed with the same Quark-Gluon Strings Model (QGSM) as hadroproproduction data on colliders. It was concluded that the HE event, which was detected in the stratosphere in 1975, differs from the collision of the nucleus. The signatures of such events are 1) the circle distribution of heavy secondary hadrons with almost nothing inside the ring and 2) the presence of heavy secondary particles with a mass out of range of known hadrons. The circle will also be the signature of heavy BDM conglomerate that disintegrate in the atmosphere (or in space) for a few similar lower-mass BDMs. These signatures should be observed in super-heavy BDM collapses on the Earth. The traces of such events are seen as circles of pits or shafts in the ground rocks. There are at least two pieces of evidence of such holes: cenotes on the Yucatan peninsula (Mexico) and pits in Durrington Walls (England). The vertical pits, or wells (because sometimes they are filled with water) have a depth of 5 - 50 meters. These super-heavy BDM collapses differ from the meteorite crash, because they do not form the craters. The existence of these places around the globe indicates the rare likelihood of meeting the super-massive BDM in proximity to Earth. The Tunguska meteorite could also be a BDM collapse. Finally, some suggestions are made about the emission of Baryonium Dark Matter toroidal conglomerates with the jets from giant active Supermassive Black Holes (SMBH).