Some people would disagree that 'plasmas comprise galaxies'.
Which people, David? Give us some citations. Don't let me be the only one doing that.
First, don't stars comprise much of the matter we actually see in galaxies? And they are plasma. Right? And what were those stars before they formed? Vast diffuse clouds of plasma? And we know that between stars in galaxies there still are vast clouds of plasma. I've provided links to such discover in previous threads. So wouldn't plasma and all the characteristics and behaviors we know about plasma be what you should model if you are studying the formation and behavior of galaxies?
Here's a recent mainstream conference announcement to that effect:
http://www.oa.uj.edu.pl/konferencje/2004mpige/index.html "The Magnetized Plasma In Galaxy Evolution ... snip ... Most of the observable baryons in the universe are in the plasma state and studying interstellar plasmas in galaxies is not only important for the understanding of galaxy evolution, but also provides an unique laboratory of great value for plasma physics in general." Too bad most of the papers at the conference didn't actually do that. Instead they focused on gnomes.
And what lies outside galaxies? Maybe these mainstream sources will give you a clue, David.
http://www.lanl.gov/news/index.php/fuseaction/home.story/story_id/10251 "Scientists discover vast intergalactic plasma cloud ... snip ... researchers led by Los Alamos scientist Philipp Kronberg have discovered a new giant in the heavens, a giant in the form of a previously undetected cloud of intergalactic plasma that stretches more than 6 million light years across."
http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap960419.html "This ROSAT image of the Virgo cluster of galaxies reveals a hot X-ray emitting plasma or gas with a temperature of 10-100 million degrees pervading the cluster. ... snip ... snip ... The large area of X-ray emission, just below and left of center, is about 1 million light-years across. ... snip ... By adding up the amount of X-ray emitting gas astronomers have found that its total mass is up to 5 times the total mass of the cluster galaxies themselves"
http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0301178 "Hot plasma in clusters of galaxies, the largest objects in the universe ... snip ... The dominant observed form of matter in clusters is hot, diffuse intergalactic gas. This intracluster plasma ... "
So how can mainstream astrophysicists pretend to accurately model the evolution and behavior of the universe if they don't model physics that are fundamental to plasmas?
Such strong and bold statements.
Speaking of strong and bold statements ... how about the certainty with which the mainstream proclaims the existence of black holes in millions (no, billions!) of objects, dark matter (5 times more than baryonic matter), dark energy (more than 3 times more than dark matter), inflation, open magnetic field lines, magnetic reconnection, redshift equates to distance, etc? Espeically when they haven't actually seen a black hole, can't tell you what dark matter and dark energy actually is, are unable to demonstrate the magnetic physics they claim in laboratory experiments, and are faced with observations that seem to prove the redshift/distance relationship is wrong for some very important objects. ROTFLOL!
Quote:
We know that electromagnetism can take plasma filaments and wind them into the shape of galaxies and during that process produce jets of synchrotron radiation that have the characteristics, duration and energy levels of the jets seen coming from galaxies. This was demonstrated decades ago in simulations published in peer reviewed papers in mainstream astrophysics journals by Anthony Peratt of Los Alamos National Labs that I have linked repeatedly on this forum.
And still unreplicated.
You can't point to a single source indicating anyone in the mainstream even attempted to replicate the results of Peratt. Not One. They didn't try because they already had their minds made up about dark matter and the dominance of gravity. So they simply ignored Peratt's work. And that's the whole problem. They are using the deductive method and calling it science. They are stacking gnomes on top of gnomes. They aren't listening to anyone who challenges them. And that's a path destined to embarrass a lot of *scientists* eventually. And waste a lot of resources in the meantime.
1. demonstrate that galaxies are mainly plasma.
I think I already did. But do you need a few more mainstream sources?
http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1086/499556 "Massive Coronae of Galaxies ... snip ... There is reason to suspect that about half of the baryons in the universe are in pressure?supported plasma in the halos of normal galaxies"
http://www.resonancepub.com/nasa_news.htm - "99.9 percent of the Universe is made up of plasma," says Dr. Dennis Gallagher, a plasma physicist at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center. "Very little material in space is made of rock like the Earth."
2. demonstrate that stars have a sufficient gharge for them to be effectd by the allged magnetic field.
3. demonstrate that the galactic magnetic field is of sufficient strenth to move ths stars.
These two questions only prove you haven't even made an attempt to understand the Electric Universe theories. And I'm not sure I want to beat my head against a brick wall trying over and over to explain it to you.
Some sites would say that intragalaic magnetic field is in milli-guass, where can you demonstrate the larger field needed.
How do you know a larger field is needed to explain the rotation curves of galaxies? Perhaps you just don't understand the physics or the model? Might I suggest you start here:
http://public.lanl.gov/alp/plasma/downloadsCosmo/Peratt86TPS-II.pdf
But I'm not holding my breath any longer that you will, David.
