March 18, 2025 – We are watching the skies this evening, awaiting the return of the “stranded astronauts”. So what planet in our solar system is considered the “Moon King”? Also making recent headline news is the astronomical discovery of another 128 moon rotating around Saturn. Its 274 moons exceeds the 95 moons of Jupiter such that Saturn is indisputably the “Moon King”.
However, we think the best discovery was back in 2016 shown in a photo captured during a NASA-European recognizance mission. The photo shows geyser-like jets of what we like to call “cosmic Watt-Ahh” blasting into the atmosphere of Enceladus, one of Saturn’s moons. The surface temperature of Enceladus is around -324 degrees F. DiTetra Gas that is infused into ultra-pure water to make Watt-Ahh is a plasma-like gas (electrically conductive) which we cannot get to freeze under extreme cold temperatures on Earth, even when the Gas itself is exposed to nitrogen gas at a temperature of -346 degrees F.
What is DiTetra Gas?
Here on Earth, our WIT Machines use strong electromagnetic fields involving iron plates to transfer electrons through water-based electrochemical solutions. This electro-magnetic process binds two oxygen atoms into a diatomic bond with four hydrogen atoms while adding electrons to hydrogen causing both stabilization of the liquid-gas structure and repulsion of other water molecules thereby creating a stable gaseous form of water that is dioxytetrahydride (i.e. H4O2) or we use a simpler name of DiTetra Gas.
Back On Enceladus
We speculate that the electromagnetic fields in the polar regions on Enceladus likely are creating the most active form of water into a plasma gas like DiTetra Gas that burst into the atmosphere as captured in a photo (see above) during the Cassini-Huygens Saturn Mission back in 2016. NASA and European space agencies also speculate about the formation of the jets containing water gas, ice particles and minerals spewing from the frozen surface of Enceladus. The NASA website states the following:
“It was data from the magnetometer aboard the Cassini spacecraft that prompted scientists to take a closer look at Enceladus with a targeted flyby. Something—perhaps an atmosphere—was pushing against Saturn’s magnetic field near Enceladus. This meant gases may have been originating from the moon’s surface or interior.
The NASA article continues … “Cassini revealed the dramatic truth: jets of icy particles from that ocean, laced with a brew of water and simple organic chemicals, gush out into space. The material shoots out at about 800 miles per hour (400 meters per second) and forms a plume that extends hundreds of miles into space. Some of the material falls back onto Enceladus, and some escapes to form Saturn’s vast E ring.”
That is why we use the cosmic tag line of “Feel the Energy of the Universe – Drink Watt-Ahh”.