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Death Star Galaxy

BAC - Well photons supposedly take a 100,000 years to reach the surface from the core. You think protons would just pass through unimpeded? You make them sound more like neutrinos unaffected by anything else going on inside the sun.

Oh whoops, there goes the baby on it's head again. Sorry, peanut gallery will retrire now. Sorry BAC you have consistanly shown a true lack of ability to understand the other model in the least

http://www.wonderquest.com/sun-heat-lizard-tail.htm "Q: How many years does it take for heat generated in the sun’s core to reach its outer layer, the photosphere? (KS, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia) ... snip ... A: Asking how long photons take to migrate to the Sun's surface can start a fight. ... snip ... The entire process takes about 17,000 years, or maybe 40,000, or 170,000, or, possibly, a million years. Anyway, a long time."

http://sunearthday.nasa.gov/2007/locations/ttt_sunlight.php "Most textbooks say that it takes light between 100,000 years and 50 million years to escape. You would be surprised to know that this simple, and very popular, question seems to be without a firm answer! ... snip ... When this random walk process is applied to the interior of the sun, and an accurate model of the solar interior is used, most answers for the age of sunlight come out to be between 10,000 and 170,000 years."

http://www.eoearth.org/article/Solar_radiation "It takes a photon approximately 100,000 years or about 1025 absorptions and re-emissions to make the journey from the core to the sun’s surface."

Now what were you muttering, David?
 
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I think it's you who doesn't "get it". For example, in all your comments, you've not ONCE mentioned double layers.

Because they cannot solve the problem of the gigantic repulsion a net charge of that magnitude would create.

Out of curiousity, would they solve the problem of what drives flares and CMEs? Instead of say ... magnetic reconnection?

Gauss's law cannot be violated.

And neither can Maxwell's laws ... and they say you can't have open field lines which is a gnome propping up the mainstreams model in dozens of places.

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One possibility from Physicist Wal Thornhill: "The nucleus of each atom, which is thousands of times heavier than the electrons, will be gravitationally offset from the centre of the atom.

And here I was, thinking we were talking about plasmas in the sun, not atoms.

And here I thought you knew what a plasma is ... :) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plasma_(physics) "a plasma is typically an ionized gas. ... snip ... Ionized refers to presence of one or more free electrons, which are not bound to an atom or molecule. ... snip ... The degree of ionization of a plasma is the proportion of atoms which have lost (or gained) electrons, and is controlled mostly by the temperature." It's an atom that has lost (or gained) some electrons ... but maybe not all of them. So it's still an atom. In fact in the sun I read that in the center the degree of ionization for the hydrogen atoms is X=0.997744 and at the surface X=0.435556. So even in the core, not all the atoms are ionized and at the surface less than 50% are ionized.

But this polarization doesn't create a net charge on the sun. It creates a positive center and a negative outer shell, and the charges balance.

Yes, but if there's a negative outer shell and it's not as negative as the galactic Birkeland currents at the heliospheric boundary, then there is voltage difference between the sun and the medium around the sun at the heliospheric boundary ... in which case, currents will flow.

That's all well and good for keeping the sun from collapsing, but it does nothing to attract electrons from outside the sun to power it.

Well I'm glad we agree this would keep the sun from collapsing so there's no need for fusion to do that as the mainstream claims.

Oh, the irony. I thought the sun was positively charged to begin with, and that was its power source.

I always said there was more than one model. This discussion is helping me clarify them both. It seems they actually work together rather well for the overall solution. One model creates a positive core and negative surface. This keeps the sun from collapsing. And there still can be a voltage difference between the surface of the sun and surrounding interstellar medium. The source of the energy put out by the sun in the ES model is not energy stored inside the sun but the immense amounts of current flowing through region of space around the sun in Birkeland filaments. And that's where the other model comes into play. That energy is released in the same manner that energy is released in discharge tubes when there is a charge difference between an anode and a cathode. Ions flow out of the sun and electrons toward the sun to equalize that voltage.

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It goes on to suggest that "there should therefore be a steady migration of electrons above all parts of the Sun's surface to its magnetic poles. This would have to be compensated for by a return flow of electrons from the magnetic poles to all parts of the Sun's surface, and/or a contra-flow of positive ions to the poles. But the very high temperature and violent thermal agitation of the Sun's substance would impede the flow of charge.* Over time, very large potential differences could build up across the Sun's surface in a north-south direction.

That's nice.

It's more than nice. It might explain the dipole field without the need for fusion in the center of the sun.

Doesn't address the problem of the net charge ejecting protons.

If there is a voltage difference between the sun and interstellar space caused by a negatively charged solar surface (which by the way will shield the positive core from the interstellar medium) and an even more negative interstellar medium, then just like in a discharge tube, positive charges will flow (hence the solar wind).

Notably lacking, of course, are any numbers on these charges, the potential differences, and the currents.

Let's nail down the feasibilty of the concept first, then see if an astrophysics community that has spent literally billions and billions of dollars chasing gnomes like dark matter, dark energy and magnetic reconnection will shell out a fraction of that amount to firm up some of those numbers. It might be nice if NASA actually ran a few spacecraft experiments to see if current is flowing. If it isn't, then this theory is falsified. But if it is ... :D

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Well photons supposedly take a 100,000 years to reach the surface from the core. You think protons would just pass through unimpeded?

Wow, did you miss that. Protons don't need to make it from the core to the surface. They just need to move a bit, and bump the next proton to move a bit, and the next one a bit, and so on.

Yes, I know that. Just like protons and electrons would have to do? And don't forget all those double layers that might form to prevent that movement. :)

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Let's not since in reality we don't really know the net charge at this point. It's at best a wag.

Then all your various electric models, which you seem to want to pick and choose among depending on the question being asked (quite convienient) and which rather depend upon what the net charge is, are at best a wag.

Well so are all your models having to do with dark matter, dark energy, magnetic reconnection, etc. etc. etc. But at least the EU community hasn't robbed the public of billions and billions of dollars to get those wags. :D

The charge on the sun is the very foundation of an electric model. You cannot brush it under the rug and expect to be taken seriously.

I'm not. We seem to be arriving at a feasible concept so that now we can spend a few million (a fraction of what you folks are spending on your gnomes) and find those numbers. :)

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As is your belief that you know what is going on inside and on the surface of the sun with respect to the behavior of charges, be they negative or positive. You don't even seem to want to consider double layers, z-pinches and Birkeland currents in any explanation ... yet those are phenomena that naturally will occur in plasmas and whenever there are spatial differences in charge in plasmas. So discussing numbers with you is a non-starter.

In other words, you want me to crunch numbers for you, because you can't do the calculations yourself.

No, I want you to consider double layers, z-pinches and Birkeland currents in your model of the sun. Because if you don't do that you are missing phenomena that naturally occur in plasmas and that will fundamentally affect the way the sun behaves. Do that, and you might not need your magnetic reconnection gnome. Wouldn't that be great?

No, I want to focus on numbers because physics is a quantitative science, not a qualitative one.

Yes. Like when Gamow predicted a CMB temperature of 5K then 10K then 50K and somehow gets credit for predicting the measured CMB temperature of 2.7K? When all along scientists who did not use Big Bang assumptions had predicted a CMB temperature close to 2.7K and even predicted it would be of radio frequency. Sorry but the way mainstream astrophysics seems to work is they only insist we focus on numbers when they serve their purposes. When they get them wrong, as appears to be the true in case after case, they ignore the numbers and invent a gnome to prop up their qualitative, deductively based, model. And spend billions to do it while not funding any programs aimed at finding numbers for the EU model. :D

If the numbers don't work, the theory doesn't work.

I think we solved those number problems in this post. The core is positive, the outer surface is negative. The negative surface electrons shield the rest of the universe from the positive core. Flow of these negative charges at the surface creates a dipole and phenomena like solar prominences. There is a large voltage difference between the surface of the sun and the interstellar medium. So current flows again, with positive ions moving outward from the sun to try and equalize the voltage and electrons flowing towards the sun from the interstellar medium. And the model explains all the phenomena we see on and above the sun that give the mainstream theorists headaches (like sunspots, the rapidly changing granules, solar flares, CMEs, the variations in temperatures above the solar surface including the extreme coronal temperatures, the solar wind, solar wind acceleration, the behavior of the Voyager spacecraft as they left the system, observations from those spacecraft regarding the heliopause, comet observations, etc) ... all without the need for magic gnomes that violate Maxwell's laws or contradict observations (like neutrino measurements).

You want to avoid numbers like the plague

No, I want NASA to fund some projects so we can get those numbers, rather than throw more billions into propping up a theory that may be just as bad as epicycles were.

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I'm still waiting to hear one of you tell us why is it that some stars have been observed completely changing locations on the HR diagram within a matter of decades when that is completely contrary to the mainstream model which requires it take thousands and even millions of years. Do you have any explanation? The EU theorists have one.

Does it include numbers?

Want to discuss this? Sure. Let's start with the observations of stars that have suddenly changed their location on the HR diagram. Do you deny that? And if not, would you agree that's not what stars are supposed to do according to the mainstream's theory? And then we can talk numbers. After we first examine the Electric Star theories explaination for that occuring. OK? :D

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I'm still waiting to hear one of you explain how stars can be made of "neutronium", a form of matter that is impossible to produce in any lab and for which no serious scientific discussion can be cited.

Do you have any idea why neutronium can't be produced in a lab? And people don't cite "serious scientific discussion", they cite peer-reviewed journal articles. Of which there is not an absence.

A web search on the word 'neutronium' will produce no peer reviewed journals. However, I'll grant that's more a sci-fi term. The technical name for this strange matter is neutron-degenerate matter. And yes, there are peer reviewed journals looking at the mathematics of that. But just as black holes may be a mathematical fiction in all the various places they are claimed to be, so may neutron stars.

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I've pointed out dozens and dozens of contradictory observations during the last several months and defenders of the mainstream simply ignore them ... ALL. So why should I discuss a number that is based on at best a guess at this point in time anyway?

Sorry, but if a number which is absolutely fundamental to the theory is just a guess, then the theory itself is just a guess.

I've explained myself above. But you go on ignoring the contradictory observations because the mainstream model is a stack of gnomes ... :D
 
Ziggurat said:
Gauss's law cannot be violated.
And neither can Maxwell's laws ... and they say you can't have open field lines which is a gnome propping up the mainstreams model in dozens of places.

I just can't let this pass.

Gauss' law IS one of Maxwell's equations!

In fact it's the first one you learn as a high school student.

It truly astonishes me that you have the gall to keep arguing over this idiotic idea, and to continue to claim that "mainstream" physicists don't understand electricity and magnetism - when you don't know even the most trivial basics of the subject yourself.

Aren't you even a little bit embarrassed?
 
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Considering the possibility that electric fields play a fundamental role and determining that they only play a lesser dynamical role for specific fundamental reasons is still considering the possibility that electric fields play a fundamental role.

No, they ignored basic and well known phenomena (like double layers, exploding double layers, z-pinches and Birkeland currents) and observations that appear to prove those phenomena do indeed exist in space ... even at scales of thousands of light years. Which is exactly what I was saying is the case. They prove my point.

Is it just that you think, since they are not considered to play as significant of a role as you would like, it sounds better to say that the possibility has not been considered?

Again, provide any peer reviewed, scientific articles that rule out those phenomena in the behavior of the comets, planets, the sun, galaxies, the formation of jets, the explanation for pulsars, etc. That is your challenge. And it's a difficult one. And unless you can do it, my point is made. The only peer reviewed sources you provided all concluded that those effects should be considered. Except for your first ... a wikipedia article which gives no details whatsoever. :rolleyes:

I see you completely ignored my statements about magnetic influences.

I responded as appropriate. I noted that your "statement shows a profound lack of understanding of the physics involved. Plasmas are not electrically neutral. They are QUASI-neutral and in fact can create very large structures." Both are facts I can prove and have many times on this forum. Would you like a specific response to your other statements? Sure thing:

Magnetic fields influence similarly moving Electrons (negative charge) and the positive charged ions of a plasma in opposite directions and would separate charges in a plasma and not coalesce the entire plasma into a large scale structure.

Guess you never heard of a Birkeland current, what the discoverer of them said, what a scientist (Alfven) who won a Nobel prize in physics for his work on plasmas said, or the model of galaxies he and Per Carlqvist developed in 1977 with Birkeland currents as a central feature, or what supercomputer simulations of galactic scale Birkeland currents showed ... despite my posting material on those facts repeatedly to this forum. :rolleyes:

Here, try these for starters:

http://www.plasma-universe.com/index.php/Birkeland_current

http://www.springerlink.com/content/h4w5l7l06280863r/

http://public.lanl.gov/alp/plasma/downloads/AdvancesII.annotated.pdf

http://www.cosmology.info/2005conference/wps/gallo_1.pdf

http://www.plasma-universe.com/index.php/Galaxy_formation

http://public.lanl.gov/alp/plasma/graphics.simulations/cicumBgal2.jpg (that's a galactic magnetic field compared to Peratt's simulation results from interacting Birkeland currents)

And here is another example of how mainstream scientists are totally misinterpreting the data because they don't understand Birkeland currents:

http://www.sciencenews.org/pages/archives/19990327/bob1.asp "Paul Bellan creates tiny solar eruptions in his laboratory. ... snip ... During an experiment in Bellan's lab, the naked eye sees a single pink flash. A high-speed camera, however, shows a miniature, glowing arch expanding from the end of a horseshoe-shaped magnet. The curve builds, wavers, twists, and then dissipates into the surrounding vacuum—all in a matter of microseconds. ... snip ... In his experiments, Bellan zaps puffs of hydrogen gas with hundreds of megawatts of electricity to transform the gas into plasma and to make the arcs twist in response to their own magnetic forces, as many of their big solar cousins do. "We can actually duplicate something going on in the sun that people thought [was explained by] a very different physics," he says. The simulations may shed new light on how prominences arise, contort, and erupt, Bellan explains. He and his colleague Freddy Hansen reported their work last November at the American Physical Society's Division of Plasma Physics meeting in New Orleans. The simulations have already led them to a new, well-received model for the formation of bright, S-shaped features on the solar surface that appear to lead to solar eruptions within hours or days (SN: 3/13/99, p. 164). In a 1996 study of some 50 such filaments seen in satellite observations, researchers led by Rust concluded that the S shapes were top-down views of extraordinarily hot, twisted prominences. Some scientists suspect that if prominences get too twisted, they become unstable and erupt. In a model developed by Bellan, a plasma's own magnetic forces produce the S shapes, which also appear in computer simulations of his lab arches. The magnetic forces twist the plasma until its current flows parallel to its magnetic field lines, Bellan explains."

Do you see what I mean? Bellan has completely missed the significance of the data and his simulation results. He's describing Birkeland currents and doesn't seem to know it. The fact is, everywhere we look we see evidence of Birkeland currents ... from the earth's atmosphere to intergalactic space.

Originally Posted by BeAChooser
And it's disingenuous for that website to state "During the 1940s and 50s, Alfvén developed magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) which enables plasmas to be modelled as waves in a fluid, for which Alfvén won the 1970 Nobel Prize for physics. MHD is a standard astronomical tool." That's because Alfven specifically stated that MHD was not the right tool to model galaxies and stars where phenomena like double layers and Birkeland currents occur. The source is also dishonest in stating that "current models indicate that plasma processes have little role to play in forming the very largest structures, such as voids, galaxy clusters and superclusters." Dishonest because current models do not include electromagnetic effects such as those Alfven and others say play a role in the formation of those structures. And the website fails to even mention the MANY problems mainstream astrophysicists are having with their models and their explanation of those large structures. I've posted several times articles discussing a number of those problems. Your side in this debate has consistently ignored what I posted. Just like the Big Bang community has done. Because they aren't open to any explanation but gravity. Q.E.D.

Disingenuous, form your point of view no doubt, dishonest, not in the least.

Wrong. It's lying by omission. Omitting an important fact, deliberately leaving another person with a misconception. These facts I noted were easily discovered. That they weren't noted in the article has to be a deliberate deception or the result of the author wearing blinders because he/she believes in the mainstream theories.

Once again you seem to think that if people do not accept your assertions

These are not "assertions" ... they are demonstrable "facts". There's a difference.

So QUASI-neutral meaning “seemingly” neutral, thanks for agreeing with the reference quoted by demonstrating a profound lack of language skills.

There's an important difference between neutral and quasi-neutral. It allows Birkeland currents to form. It means that objects that come in contact with plasma will charge ... like comets. Plasma is a better conductor than copper. And for the record, quasi-neutral is the language used in scientific papers.

Why don’t you just list what you would consider a “mainstream source” or mainstream journal, the time frame you would consider “recent” and any other hoops you would like to see someone jump through, then wait to see who volunteers.

It must be a scientific journal, peer reviewed and must specifically conclude that Birkeland currents, double layers and z-pinches play no role in the behavior of comets, the sun, galaxies, jet phenomena (from proto-stars and objects claimed to be black holes, neutron stars, quark stars) or intergalactic clouds. And you can go back as far as you like. That's the challenge.

Originally Posted by BeAChooser
And you think by linking a paper done in 1982 by a proponent of plasma cosmology and associate of Alfven you show that the mainstream has considered it? Who do you think you are kidding?

Stop kidding yourself. This is a peer reviewed paper in a mainstream journal. Both the editors and peer review must have considered it worthy of consideration and publication.

Except it concludes that those phenomena (at least the ones they mentioned) are significant. Your challenge is to find one that concludes they aren't. And I'm betting you can't do it. :)

Originally Posted by BeAChooser
Again, you only prove my point. This is an article written in 1993 which notes double layers might be responsible for the emissions from pulsars. It was obviously ignored by the rest of mainstream physics community. Also, note that the source spends a lot of time on the bogus gnome of magnetic reconnection and assumes we know what neutron stars are (we don't really). It's hard to not laugh at a source that back in 1993 was treating magnetic reconnection as if it were proven physics when in 2007 they still haven't proven it or tend to describe phenomena that sound like exploding double layers in their "proofs". But to those authors credit, at least they mention double layers as the other possible cause of the emissions. They note that double layers are "effective particle accelerators." The authors find they could produce the 10^^15 volt discharges that are observed. This is something that seems to have been completely forgotten in most mainstream work since that time.

So once again your point is if your assertions were not generally accepted by this paper or after its publication then both were ignored.

No, my point is that if a peer-reviewed journal published a study that concluded double layers could be responsible for the pulsar emissions, why did the mainstream just ignore it. As far as I know they didn't publish any peer reviewed articles challenging this one. They just ignored it. That's my point. And that's not the way science is supposed to work. And mind you, there were other peer reviewed articles that supported the conclusion. And they were ignored too. That's not the way science is supposed to work.

My particular preference for this paper is the following quote, which you seemed to ignore or at least not address in your response.

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If this particle density is moderately low, field-aligned currents are likely to trigger micro-instabilities and possible double layer formation before reconnection occurs. If instead the lowest particle density is higher, reconnection is likely to occur before the threshold for micro-instability is reached. In some circumstances, the current may continue to grow even after double layers have formed, eventually triggering a reconnection event. So it would seem that one of this paper’s assertions is that under certain conditions some of your favorite missing mainstream plasma physics orphans (Brikeland currents and Double Layers) could be the parents of one of your favorite mainstream plasma physics gnomes (Magnetic Reconnection). So whenever you see a mainstream references to magnetic reconnection in plasma remember your orphans could be the triggering mechanism.

ROTFLOL! You've completely missed the point of the authors. They said BOTH double layers and reconnection could produce the observed energy levels. Here's a fact. Magnetic reconnection is STILL a gnome, almost 2 decades after these authors published an article that is written as if magnetic reconnection was a proven fact. It wasn't. And it's still a gnome today because Maxwell's laws prohibit the sort of reconnection they claim. Here's what Hannes Alfven, Nobel prize winner and inventor of MHD said on this matter: "The concepts of 'frozen-in magnetic field lines' and 'field-line reconnection', which are frequently used in discussions of the theory of the magnetosphere, have been criticized by Alfven and Falthammar (1971), by Heikkila (1973), and by Alfven (1975). In the present paper, it is demonstrated that both concepts are unnecessary and often misleading. The frozen-in concept is shown to belong to the pseudo-plasma formalism which is useful only in special cases." You and the mainstream would be wise to listen to him. The problem is that mainstream researchers are now doing experiments and SIMPLY LABELING phenomena as reconnection that are actually exploding double layers. They apparently do not understand the physics of what is going on so they've invented a gnome and are sticking too it no matter what damage they do to physics. Because their jobs, reputations and the expensive projects they have planned all depend on the continuation of that gnome. Because Big Bang itself (and the jobs, reputations and expensive projects associated with it) all depend on the continuation of that gnome. So as a result they just ignore what Maxwell's laws say, what Alfven said, and what current critics are telling them. In fact, they don't even mention double layers in all the papers they've published on their gnomes.

Your statements only continue to demonstrate that your grasp on mainstream references is as feeble as your grasp of fundamental physics. Please read, think and learn.

You best continuing wiping. And you now have a very clear challenge. Let's see if your "grasp" of mainstream references is as good as you seem to think. :D

By the way you attributed an entire posts worth of quotes to me instead of their originator.

Sorry. I copied all the posts to me on the thread into one file and formulated responses. Unfortunately, I ended up copying the QUOTE=The Man; text into locations that were supposed to be QUOTE=Ziggurat. Again my apologies to you and the forum for the confusion.
 
It truly astonishes me that you have the gall to keep arguing over this idiotic idea, and to continue to claim that "mainstream" physicists don't understand electricity and magnetism - when you don't know even the most trivial basics of the subject yourself.

I'm not trying to pass myself off an an expert on this subject. I'm simply quoting a Nobel prize winning physicist (and others) who are experts when I tell you that magnetic reconnection, open field lines and frozen-in field lines are BOGUS GNOMES.

Aren't you even a little bit embarrassed?

And aren't you the least bit embarrassed that mainstream researchers describe phenomena in experiments that even a layperson can see accurately describe Birkeland currents and double layers? Aren't you the least bit embarrassed that you can't come up with peer reviewed articles that rule out the role of Birkeland currents, double layers and z-pinches in astrophysical phenomena like comets, the sun, jets and galaxies? Aren't you the least bit embarrassed that dark matter, dark energy, inflation, magnetic reconnection, black holes and even the mainstream theory of comets are all still gnomes after more than 30 years of research and the expenditure of countless billions of dollars? Maybe you should be.

Oh, and being as well informed and on top of things as you apparently think you are, aren't you the least bit embarrassed that you didn't catch that mistake of claiming the jets in the subject article are neutral gas instead of plasma? :D
 
http://www.itwire.com/content/view/15407/1066/ "Astronomers are not certain why the comet expanded after it got to its closest point to the Sun. Normally, comets will outgas (expel) particles as they approach the Sun and reach its closest point on its orbit about the Sun. However, Comet Holmes expanded six months after this event."

http://starryskies.net/articles/2007/10/comet-holmes.php "Comets usually brighten when they near the Sun, and outgassing begins, creating the comet's tail. But that's not what happened with Holmes. On October 23, the comet had a major outburst and in only a day increased in brightness almost a million times!"

A more comprehensive history of 17/P Holmes is available here. (More.)

It'd be more helpful to include its historical highlights rather than focus entirely on purported "anomalies".

And here's another peculiarity: "Comet Holmes has never formed a tail, or so astronomers thought. Then they studied the comet using infrared imaging. A faint tail-like structure was detected, but it was not pointing away from the Sun as astronomers would have expected." Now note that EC theorists have no problem with this observation.

I remember seeing coverage of the press release from the University of Montreal, but never saw a follow-up. Regardless, note its date (October 29th). A few days later, Holmes was indeed sporting an ion tail, and you can find numerous examples. Were you not aware of this, or did you choose to ignore it?

But clearly NASA does. From the Rosetta website: http://rosetta.jpl.nasa.gov/dsp_sci...SelL2=CometPrimer&buttonSelL3=AnatomyOfAComet " When a comet is in the deep freeze of space, very far from the Sun, it is completely frozen. But when it approaches to within about 140 to 280 million miles (about 225 million to 450 million km) of the sun, its ices begin to sublime . They boil off of the surface or burst out of the interior as jets of gas, carrying dust with them. This spewing gas and dust create a huge "coma" around the nucleus. ... snip ... As the solar wind and magnetic field lines wrap around the coma, they push ionized gas and dust away from, and around, the head of the comet, to form tails that always stream directly away from the sun."

Your post implies some huge deviation from the standard model but you're in red herring territory here by attempting to malign NASA and mainstream cometary analysis -- specifically, for suggesting this comet didn't exhibit behavior which it in fact did.

Has 17/P Holmes displayed some unexpected and interesting properties? Sure.

Do those unexpected properties require throwing out the standard cometary model? No.



Further, I find it puzzling that you eagerly and repeatedly claim "gnomes" while simultaneously including giants of your own. Setting aside the other questionable sources you've cited...

By the way ... care to explain how a dirty snowball caused this according to the mainstream model?

http://www.jmccanneyscience.com/comet solar flare movie 01072004.mpeg

Maybe here's the real answer ...

http://www.tmgnow.com/repository/cometary/smcomet.html

...why do you give this any credence?

The animation in your repost is from SOHO's 2002 observation of 96P/Machholz (link). Why do you suggest comets (sungrazing or otherwise) cause CMEs? Correlation does not equal causation, so what is your basis for this claim? (Please be specific in regard to causal mechanism.)

If you're relying on McCanney as a primary source, it's understandable you'd harbor cometary misconceptions. His claims are demonstrably wrong. Oh so wrong.
 
It'd be more helpful to include its historical highlights rather than focus entirely on purported "anomalies".

"Purported" anomalies? Sorry but astronomers all over the world have said they don't understand what's going on with Holmes and that the cause is indeed a mystery. And now a few are developing convoluted models to try and explain it when perhaps the answer is staring them in the face.

I remember seeing coverage of the press release from the University of Montreal, but never saw a follow-up. Regardless, note its date (October 29th). A few days later, Holmes was indeed sporting an ion tail, and you can find numerous examples. Were you not aware of this, or did you choose to ignore it?

The point isn't that it didn't have a tail. I readily admitted it had one. I even have posted images on various threads showing the tail. The point is that the tail didn't point away from the sun ... like mainstream theory requires. Did you choose to ignore that?

Your post implies some huge deviation from the standard model but you're in red herring territory here by attempting to malign NASA and mainstream cometary analysis -- specifically, for suggesting this comet didn't exhibit behavior which it in fact did.

Again, I didn't suggest it had no tail. Never have. On various threads on this forum I have even posted images of the tail and mentioned the fact that the tail disconnected at one point.

The fact remains that NASA states "As the solar wind and magnetic field lines wrap around the coma, they push ionized gas and dust away from, and around, the head of the comet, to form tails that always stream directly away from the sun." Yet this one apparently didn't.

http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewpr.rss.spacewire.html?pid=23901 "A preliminary analysis, performed by astronomers Pierre Bastien and Rene Doyon from Universite de Montréal and the Centre de Recherche en Astrophysique du Quebec (CRAQ) clearly shows a bright elongated feature surrounding the more luminous comet's coma. This elongated feature, probably a cloud of dust and gas, which resembles a small tail, is going out at position angle of 145 degrees (+/- 5 deg), measured from north and going east. This direction makes an angle of about 33 degrees relative to the Sun-comet direction. Although the images display tantalizing evidence of a tail, the direction of the feature does not point directly in the direction opposite to the Sun, as expected."

Now can you cite a more recent analysis that changes that conclusion?

Do those unexpected properties require throwing out the standard cometary model? No.

If that was the only anomalous data, I'd likely agree. But it's not. The data base on comets is filled with observations that just don't match the standard cometary model that you defend. I've pointed out some of that data on other threads on this topic. Shall I repost that here on this thread for you? Or perhaps you should just look on threads where I've been posting. You'll encounter it in no time. Look for a discussion of Comet Temple 1 (the Deep Impact mission), Comet Wild 2, Comet Hale-Bopp, Comet Borrelly, etc. :)

Originally Posted by BeAChooser
By the way ... care to explain how a dirty snowball caused this according to the mainstream model?
http://www.jmccanneyscience.com/come...001072004.mpeg
Maybe here's the real answer ...
http://www.tmgnow.com/repository/cometary/smcomet.html

...why do you give this any credence?

Perhaps because you haven't convinced me that your model actually works at all. Maybe it's time to look at models that DO include well know plasma phenomena and electric current.

The animation in your repost is from SOHO's 2002 observation of 96P/Machholz (link). Why do you suggest comets (sungrazing or otherwise) cause CMEs? Correlation does not equal causation, so what is your basis for this claim? (Please be specific in regard to causal mechanism.)

Now of course, I didn't suggest the comet caused the CME. I merely pointed out the possibility that the unusualness of that comet and the CME might be connected ... i.e., both a result of some underlying electrical phenomena in that region of the sun.

And this is not an unusual occurrence as you seem to be suggesting.

http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2007/01oct_encke.htm "Comet Encke never knew what hit it. On April 20, 2007, the comet had just dipped inside the orbit of Mercury, perilously close to the sun, when a solar eruption struck and literally tore the comet's tail off. ... snip ... The eruption that hit Encke was a CME or "coronal mass ejection." ... snip ... ctually, it is a little surprising that a CME succeeded in ripping off a comet's tail. For all their mass and power, CMEs are spread over a large volume of space. The impact of a gossamer CME exerts little more than a few nanoPascals of mechanical pressure—softer than a baby's breath. The ripping action must have been something else. "We believe the explanation is 'magnetic reconnection,'" says Vourlidas."

When they can't actually explain something ... they do what they always do ... blame it on that gnome, magnetic reconnection. :)

And although I didn't suggest it was the cause ...

http://www.thunderbolts.info/tpod/2005/arch05/050526cometcme.htm "May 26, 2005, Comet Neat and CME's, When a coronal mass ejection greeted Comet NEAT, scientists called it a “coincidence”. ... snip ... If the Sun is a glow discharge at the center of an electric field, and a comet carries a strong negative charge together with a vast envelope of charged particles, the categorical dismissal of mutual interactions is premature. In fact, SOHO has recorded several instances of comets plunging into the solar corona in “coincidental” association with CMEs. Here (http://soho.nascom.nasa.gov/bestofsoho/Movies/C3_2comets_CME/C3_2comets_CME.mov ) we see two comets grazing the Sun followed by a particularly energetic blast from a mass ejection."

http://209.85.173.104/search?q=cach...4384.pdf+cme+comets&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=14&gl=us "Geophysical Research Abstracts, Vol. 7, 04384, 2005 ... snip ... Impacts of comets onto the Sun and coronal mass ejections ... snip ... The energy of the impactors which may initiate the evolution of micro-instabilities, reconnection of magnetic field lines and ultimately trigger a CME may be substantially less than the final energy of CME." And they don't even consider the real electrical/magnetic physics. :)

If you're relying on McCanney as a primary source, it's understandable you'd harbor cometary misconceptions. His claims are demonstrably wrong. Oh so wrong.

I'm not. But go ahead and demonstrate it wrong. Because the link you provided doesn't actually do that. McCanney may have latched on to other wackiness, but you haven't actually proven that this specific theory is wrong. :)
 
"Purported" anomalies? Sorry but astronomers all over the world have said they don't understand what's going on with Holmes and that the cause is indeed a mystery. And now a few are developing convoluted models to try and explain it when perhaps the answer is staring them in the face.

There's no need to exaggerate. While the nature and/or timing of Holmes's outburst is somewhat uncharacteristic (or perhaps not, based on Kronk's history of observations I posted noting the variance in perihelion distance), you cherry-picked a couple of 17/P's properties and somehow think that (further) warrants discarding the mainstream cometary model in favor of one which incorporates your "pet" fringe cosmology. The cause of the outburst doesn't require invoking bizarre EU claims which neither jibe with established physics nor better explain existing data/observations. Based on the sources you cite, I question your ability to distinguish science from pseudoscience.

The point isn't that it didn't have a tail. I readily admitted it had one. I even have posted images on various threads showing the tail. The point is that the tail didn't point away from the sun ... like mainstream theory requires. Did you choose to ignore that?

I see my post wasn't clear. I was not attempting to claim you denied the presence of an ion tail. Rather, it's stated in the URLs I provided that a clearly recognizable ion tail did form, and, pointed away from the Sun.

You cited a blog article which didn't elaborate on specifics from the Canadian observers (nor does their own press release, unfortunately) -- it merely highlighted the possibility of a "faint tail-like structure" having been detected in infrared, based on a preliminary analysis. They never specifically stated it was a tail.

This elongated feature, probably a cloud of dust and gas, which resembles a small tail, is going out at position angle of 145 degrees (+/- 5 deg), measured from north and going east.

Contrary to your emphasis placed on a different portion of text, a careful look at this does not yield the conclusion that they even observed an ion tail, let alone one whose properties defy the prevailing model. You perhaps assumed that they discovered an ion tail, that it didn't match expected observations by not pointing directly away from the Sun, and then chimed in on how wrong you believe the mainstream and NASA to be as a result.

On various threads on this forum I have even posted images of the tail and mentioned the fact that the tail disconnected at one point.

Just out of curiosity -- where on this forum? I searched your posts for relevant commentary and browsed back through them manually, but to no avail.

The fact remains that NASA states "As the solar wind and magnetic field lines wrap around the coma, they push ionized gas and dust away from, and around, the head of the comet, to form tails that always stream directly away from the sun." Yet this one apparently didn't.

The ion tail which formed did indeed point away from the Sun, and is described as such in the imagery/links I provided.

http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewpr.rss.spacewire.html?pid=23901 "A preliminary analysis, performed by astronomers Pierre Bastien and Rene Doyon from Universite de Montréal and the Centre de Recherche en Astrophysique du Quebec (CRAQ) clearly shows a bright elongated feature surrounding the more luminous comet's coma. This elongated feature, probably a cloud of dust and gas, which resembles a small tail, is going out at position angle of 145 degrees (+/- 5 deg), measured from north and going east. This direction makes an angle of about 33 degrees relative to the Sun-comet direction. Although the images display tantalizing evidence of a tail, the direction of the feature does not point directly in the direction opposite to the Sun, as expected."

Now can you cite a more recent analysis that changes that conclusion?

On the contrary -- as I've noted, no conclusion was ever made that the "structure" they detected was a tail. The astronomy department at the University of Montreal never issued a subsequent press release to the one I've linked above. No secondary nor tertiary nor final analysis was ever given. No confirmation was ever provided. I think your desire to selectively interpret if not shoehorn the text is what's leading you astray.

If that was the only anomalous data, I'd likely agree. But it's not. The data base on comets is filled with observations that just don't match the standard cometary model that you defend. I've pointed out some of that data on other threads on this topic. Shall I repost that here on this thread for you? Or perhaps you should just look on threads where I've been posting. You'll encounter it in no time. Look for a discussion of Comet Temple 1 (the Deep Impact mission), Comet Wild 2, Comet Hale-Bopp, Comet Borrelly, etc. :)

I'll have to give a second shot at digging them up. Were they dedicated threads or tangental discussions inside others?

Perhaps because you haven't convinced me that your model actually works at all. Maybe it's time to look at models that DO include well know plasma phenomena and electric current.

This is a non-answer. First, it's not my model, nor is the onus upon me to justify established astronomy or cosmology to you. Second, you're directly challenging mainstream fields replete with sound observations and evidence. You have the responsibility of stating your case rather than attempting to shift the burden of proof.

Now, would you kindly answer my question in your own words: What is it specifically about McCanney's cometary claims you think have merit, and why?

Now of course, I didn't suggest the comet caused the CME. I merely pointed out the possibility that the unusualness of that comet and the CME might be connected ... i.e., both a result of some underlying electrical phenomena in that region of the sun.

You again avoided a direct question (two, actually), this time with a conspicuous backpedal.

You certainly did suggest 96P/Machholz caused the CME. It's obvious in your post. You even delivered it in the form of begging the question -- assuming there's a specific relationship between two unrelated events, demanding a "mainstream" answer for how the comet caused the CME, and while sniping at the "dirty snowball" description.

No specific causal mechanism offered, no explanation provided, just more text snippets you somehow consider relevant. They don't address what I asked you.

I'm not. But go ahead and demonstrate it wrong. Because the link you provided doesn't actually do that.

Did you even read Plait's individual refutations? The URL I provided is that of the intro. There's an index of key components of JM's "model" at the top, and The BA dissects them in detail. They're directly relevant to the page you posted and clearly illustrate why McCanney's claims are untenable.
 
http://www.itwire.com/content/view/15407/1066/ "Astronomers are not certain why the comet expanded after it got to its closest point to the Sun. Normally, comets will outgas (expel) particles as they approach the Sun and reach its closest point on its orbit about the Sun. However, Comet Holmes expanded six months after this event."

http://starryskies.net/articles/2007/10/comet-holmes.php "Comets usually brighten when they near the Sun, and outgassing begins, creating the comet's tail. But that's not what happened with Holmes. On October 23, the comet had a major outburst and in only a day increased in brightness almost a million times!"

And here's another peculiarity: "Comet Holmes has never formed a tail, or so astronomers thought. Then they studied the comet using infrared imaging. A faint tail-like structure was detected, but it was not pointing away from the Sun as astronomers would have expected." Now note that EC theorists have no problem with this observation.

But clearly NASA does. From the Rosetta website: http://rosetta.jpl.nasa.gov/dsp_sci...SelL2=CometPrimer&buttonSelL3=AnatomyOfAComet " When a comet is in the deep freeze of space, very far from the Sun, it is completely frozen. But when it approaches to within about 140 to 280 million miles (about 225 million to 450 million km) of the sun, its ices begin to sublime . They boil off of the surface or burst out of the interior as jets of gas, carrying dust with them. This spewing gas and dust create a huge "coma" around the nucleus. ... snip ... As the solar wind and magnetic field lines wrap around the coma, they push ionized gas and dust away from, and around, the head of the comet, to form tails that always stream directly away from the sun."

And there's more ...

And finally there is this: http://209.85.173.104/search?q=cach...ature+surface+holmes&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&gl=us "A novel mechanism for outbursts of Comet 17P/Holmes and other short-period comets, 2007, ... snip ... Given the current models for comet outbursts, it is difficult if not impossible to explain the magnitude
of the observed phenomena involving 17P.
" So they come up with a complex chemical reaction gnome to explain it rather than even consider a potentially far simpler explanation. But then that would require the mainstream community accept the possibility that space is filled with electrical currents ... and they just aren't going to do that because that would threaten so many of their other beloved gnomes. :)

And David ... do you know that Holmes is still a naked eye object? It has an estimated magnitude of 3.5 and has a size about ten times the size of a full moon. At the distance it is at, that makes it the largest object in the solar system. Far larger than the sun.

This image was taken December 25th:

http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~pane/Holmes/images/17P_Holmes_2007_12_25.jpg

And here's a blow up of that image.

http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~pane/Holmes/images/17P_Holmes_2007_12_25_detail.jpg

Notice the radial spikes around the nucleus. The source says they may be artifacts or possibly jets.

And this is a great picture showing the growth of this interesting object:

http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~pane/Holmes/images/17P_Holmes_2007_newcomposite13.jpg

I will read them with glee while I am on break tomorrow, I sure enjoyed the comet and meteors!

:)
 
http://www.wonderquest.com/sun-heat-lizard-tail.htm "Q: How many years does it take for heat generated in the sun’s core to reach its outer layer, the photosphere? (KS, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia) ... snip ... A: Asking how long photons take to migrate to the Sun's surface can start a fight. ... snip ... The entire process takes about 17,000 years, or maybe 40,000, or 170,000, or, possibly, a million years. Anyway, a long time."

http://sunearthday.nasa.gov/2007/locations/ttt_sunlight.php "Most textbooks say that it takes light between 100,000 years and 50 million years to escape. You would be surprised to know that this simple, and very popular, question seems to be without a firm answer! ... snip ... When this random walk process is applied to the interior of the sun, and an accurate model of the solar interior is used, most answers for the age of sunlight come out to be between 10,000 and 170,000 years."

http://www.eoearth.org/article/Solar_radiation "It takes a photon approximately 100,000 years or about 1025 absorptions and re-emissions to make the journey from the core to the sun’s surface."

Now what were you muttering, David?

Do you know the difference between a

p-H-oton and a p-R-oton?

What is the pressure of a photon making it's way through the sun and the repulsion of protons as apparently calculated by Ziggy?

I am not saying that Ziggy's numbers are exact but he is saying that the repulsion would be there despite any double layers.

That is the baby on the head, photons are essentially charge neutral, protons are not. You still haven't really refuted what Ziggy has said about the lectric sun discharging it's charge in an explosive layer.
But whatver.
 
BAC,

Where do the elements past iron come from?
Where has the creation of matter as suggested by Alven and Arp been recreated on earth?
Why would the alpha-lyman lines suggest that QSO's are farther than some suggest they are?
Why are there the concentrations of elements the way that they are, suggesting nucleosynthesis in stars through fusion?
If there are no nuetron stars and black holes where do the elements past iron come from?
How come there couldn't be plasma effects on smaller scales (galactic clusters) and gravitational effects on larger scales?
How come the sun doesn't blow off it's upper layers from the charges needed to supply all those radiant photons?

I think plasma cosmology has some really cool insights but it also has it's share of questions to answer.
 
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I'm not trying to pass myself off an an expert on this subject.

This is not about being an expert (although you'd have to be one if you wanted to try to argue for such a fringe idea). This is about basic knowledge, knowledge at a level that might allow you to roughly follow a discussion between experts - although certainly not participate. It's literally high school level physics.

And yet you don't understand even that, let alone the details of astrophysics you are claiming are wrong.

I'm simply quoting a Nobel prize winning physicist (and others) who are experts when I tell you that magnetic reconnection, open field lines and frozen-in field lines are BOGUS GNOMES.

Ah - classic argument from authority.

Not all Nobel winners are credible - on the contrary, quite a few turned into crackpots in their old age. Why don't you quote laureate James Watson, who recently declared Africans are stupid, only to have his own DNA reveal a significant African component? Or Robert Laughlin, who has made himself into a laughingstock promoting a silly idea about black holes?

Come to think of it, why don't you quote the several Nobel laureates that won the prize for effects that contradict the ridiculous idea you're promoting? Or just about every other Nobel laureate alive, who agree with the "mainstream" theories and that your ideas are crackpot nonsense?

Aren't you the least bit embarrassed that dark matter, dark energy, inflation, magnetic reconnection, black holes and even the mainstream theory of comets are all still gnomes after more than 30 years of research and the expenditure of countless billions of dollars? Maybe you should be.

Dark matter was observed indirectly in the 90s, and directly only last year. The acceleration of the expansion of the universe, which implies the existence of dark energy, was first reported in 1998 or 99. Inflation was experimentally confirmed, or at least very strongly supported, by the WMAP data of the last 3-4 years. Black holes have been known to exist for a long time, and observed pretty directly recently.

What was that about "still gnomes" (not that I even know what you mean by that)?

Oh, and being as well informed and on top of things as you apparently think you are, aren't you the least bit embarrassed that you didn't catch that mistake of claiming the jets in the subject article are neutral gas instead of plasma? :D

Now it's my job to "catch" mistakes in every post on this forum? Yours alone are more than enough for a full-time employment.
 
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You best continuing wiping. And you now have a very clear challenge. Let's see if your "grasp" of mainstream references is as good as you seem to think. :D


You seem to be the only one who’s “challenged”. So, let’s review a bit, since you have a demonstrative problem keeping things straight

You now seem open to the possibility that the sun might have fusion as its source of energy.

Too bad the other side isn't as open in considering the possibility that electromagnetic effects play a fundamental role in the formation and behavior of stars and galaxies. :)


I do not think anyone is saying that natural plasma effects do not occur in or around the sun since it is a big ball of plasma, just that those effects can not power the sun in any scientifically consistent way.

If you believe that, then find a mainstream source that mentions Birkeland currents and double layers in regards to solar phenomena and galactic rotation curves. :)


Again, provide any peer reviewed, scientific articles that rule out those phenomena in the behavior of the comets, planets, the sun, galaxies, the formation of jets, the explanation for pulsars, etc. That is your challenge. And it's a difficult one. And unless you can do it, my point is made. The only peer reviewed sources you provided all concluded that those effects should be considered. Except for your first ... a wikipedia article which gives no details whatsoever. :rolleyes:


Well thank you for conceding that I made my point.

I do not think anyone is saying that natural plasma effects do not occur in or around the sun since it is a big ball of plasma, just that those effects can not power the sun in any scientifically consistent way.

If you believe that, then find a mainstream source that mentions Birkeland currents and double layers in regards to solar phenomena and galactic rotation curves. .

The only peer reviewed sources you provided all concluded that those effects should be considered


Well that is what I said, that they should be and are considered.


Again, provide any peer reviewed, scientific articles that rule out those phenomena in the behavior of the comets, planets, the sun, galaxies, the formation of jets, the explanation for pulsars, etc. That is your challenge. And it's a difficult one. And unless you can do it, my point is made.


And just which point would that be, the previous point you made that they are not considered or mentioned by mainstream sources or your new point that they are specifically considered mentioned and ruled out by mainstream sources?

So, having now conceded that I made my point your response is to “challenge me” to demonstrate the opposite of my point. What kind of bizzaro world do you imagine this is? If you are too lazy to find documentation opposing the point I made then hire a research assistant.

You seem to live in an unrealistic world of extremes, either the phenomena that you attribute so much significance are not considered by the mainstream or they are considered and ruled out. The actuality that they are considered are not ruled out but just have a less significant role then you would like or simply referred to by more generic names, never seems to register with you. You can change your points, obfuscate (usually with a wall of text just repeating the same thing), challenge people to disprove their own points, claim gravity is primarily responsible for keeping your charged sun from blowing apart but not primarily responsible for coalescing it in the first place, quote mine and ignore the fact that science has moved on since the 70’s all you want. It only demonstrates your assertions to be just another conspiracy theory, claiming the suppression of past scientific knowledge. From my understanding of magnetic reconnection your double layers are the separatrices that divide the magnetic regions being reconnected and coincide with field aligned current sheets or Birkeland current sheets. So your mainstream plasma physics orphans double layers and Birkeland currents are simply going under the more generic names of separatrices and (field aligned) current sheets. Anytime you’re ready, please, come join us in the 21st century of science.



A useful link on magnetic reconnection research.

http://mrx.pppl.gov/
 
The comet stuff is eye opening. Maybe somebody should start a THREAD about them. Then you guys can bash each other about the head and shoulders for all eternity there.
 
Out of curiousity, would they solve the problem of what drives flares and CMEs? Instead of say ... magnetic reconnection?

I doubt it, because none of the advocates of the idea can crunch any numbers. But let's worry about something far more fundamental first: the energy output of the sun.

And neither can Maxwell's laws ...

Bwahahahaha! As already pointed out, Gauss's law is just the integral form of one of Maxwell's equations.

and they say you can't have open field lines

Actually, the classification is open and closed current sheets. The associated field lines still loop closed. The distinction is about what happens to the flares, not the magnetic fields.

And here I thought you knew what a plasma is ... :) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plasma_(physics) "a plasma is typically an ionized gas. ... snip ... Ionized refers to presence of one or more free electrons, which are not bound to an atom or molecule. ... snip ... The degree of ionization of a plasma is the proportion of atoms which have lost (or gained) electrons, and is controlled mostly by the temperature." It's an atom that has lost (or gained) some electrons ... but maybe not all of them. So it's still an atom. In fact in the sun I read that in the center the degree of ionization for the hydrogen atoms is X=0.997744 and at the surface X=0.435556. So even in the core, not all the atoms are ionized and at the surface less than 50% are ionized.

And here I thought the mainstream model was supposedly entirely wrong, but you're still using their predictions.

Yes, but if there's a negative outer shell and it's not as negative as the galactic Birkeland currents at the heliospheric boundary, then there is voltage difference between the sun and the medium around the sun at the heliospheric boundary ... in which case, currents will flow.

Actually, NO. Once again, Gauss's law. You NEED a net POSITVE charge on the sun to attract electrons. You can do that with a negative shell and a positive core if the positive core has a big enough charge, but you CANNOT get rid of the problem of large repulsion of the outermost positive charges, a repulsion orders of magnitude stronger than gravity.

Well I'm glad we agree this would keep the sun from collapsing so there's no need for fusion to do that as the mainstream claims.

If the numbers for the polarization work out, sure. But polarization doesn't explain what powers the sun, and the only ideas you've got for that produces completely unphysical results.

I always said there was more than one model.

And none of them will work. Which is why you haven't come back and said oh, well if the 1010 volt model doesn't work, then maybe the model with X will. You don't want to deal with the numbers. You cannot deal with the numbers.

It seems they actually work together rather well for the overall solution.

So reality changes depending on which problem you need to address? Nope, doesn't work like that.

One model creates a positive core and negative surface. This keeps the sun from collapsing. And there still can be a voltage difference between the surface of the sun and surrounding interstellar medium.

Still need a net charge for that. Gauss's law. And you can't give a net charge that can power the sun without causing that excess charge to explode. Unless you pick two different numbers, which is... unphysical.

If there is a voltage difference between the sun and interstellar space

Then there's a net charge on the sun. End of sentence. How you configure that net charge within the sun cannot change that requirement. It's Gauss's law.

caused by a negatively charged solar surface (which by the way will shield the positive core from the interstellar medium)

It will only fully shield the core's charge if the shell has the same or greater negative charge (Gauss's law once again), in which case the sun would repel electrons, not attract them. Quite the flip-flop you've got going on here.

Let's nail down the feasibilty of the concept first,

Sure, let's do that. Propose some net charges and net currents, and we can calculate stuff like power output, voltages, and forces. I already did that on one set of numbers you provided, and they show that your first shot is NOT feasible. You're quite welcome to try again, but I'm not going to fine-tune your model for you.

It might be nice if NASA actually ran a few spacecraft experiments to see if current is flowing.

And how do you do that? You detect the flow of electrons and ions. Which, surprise surprise, is exactly one of the things Ulysses is doing.

Yes, I know that. Just like protons and electrons would have to do? And don't forget all those double layers that might form to prevent that movement. :)

Once again, your cluelessness shines through. How can a double layer prevent a proton from moving through? By having the far side positively charged (ie, extra protons). But those protons on the far side will themselves be repulsed. The double layer may block individual protons, but not the net flow of charge, because a double layer can't insulate the field of a net charge.


Yes you are. You have yet to show how the enormous repulsion your model requires can be contained. Waving terms around without any numbers is meaningless. But that's the best defense you've got.

We seem to be arriving at a feasible concept

No, it isn't. Not until you can show how to keep your model from exploding.

When all along scientists who did not use Big Bang assumptions had predicted a CMB temperature close to 2.7K and even predicted it would be of radio frequency.

Clue for the clueless: the temperature and the frequency are the same prediction, not two different ones.

I think we solved those number problems in this post. The core is positive, the outer surface is negative. The negative surface electrons shield the rest of the universe from the positive core. Flow of these negative charges at the surface creates a dipole and phenomena like solar prominences. There is a large voltage difference between the surface of the sun and the interstellar medium.

Which requires a large net charge. And we've already seen what that does. Can't get away from Gauss's law.

No, I want NASA to fund some projects so we can get those numbers, rather than throw more billions into propping up a theory that may be just as bad as epicycles were.

This may be silly of me, but I'll defer funding decisions to people who actually know what Maxwell's equations are. You obviously have no familiarity with them.
 
A web search on the word 'neutronium' will produce no peer reviewed journals. However, I'll grant that's more a sci-fi term.

One of the reasons for that is that Mendeleev used the term to describe his hypothesized element 0 (ie, a free neutron), which does exist but is unstable.

The technical name for this strange matter is neutron-degenerate matter. And yes, there are peer reviewed journals looking at the mathematics of that. But just as black holes may be a mathematical fiction in all the various places they are claimed to be, so may neutron stars.

So in other words, your earlier statements about no scientific debate were completely bogus, and now you're retreating into the claim that since we don't know for sure, that it's likely just a fiction. Let me clue you in to something: physics is about the math. The whole bloody point is to use the math to make quantitative predictions. Neutron stars are one of those quantitative predictions. What have the electric universe guys got? Not quantitative predictions. They come up with a voltage on the sun but can't even figure out the corresponding charge required (and the sun being "less negative" won't do it - Gauss's law), nor the repulsion that charge will create (Double layers and Debeye screening can't do it - Gauss's law again), or ANY clue about how to confine that net charge to keep it from exploding. Just hand-waving appeals to key terms they're infatuated with.
 
Do you know the difference between a

p-H-oton and a p-R-oton?

What is the pressure of a photon making it's way through the sun and the repulsion of protons as apparently calculated by Ziggy?

I think he knows the difference. The point he was trying to make is that since it takes so long for the average photon (traveling at the speed of light) to exit the core of the sun, a net positive charge from protons shouldn't be able to move out so quickly, since photons move faster than protons. So his problem isn't actually confusing protons and photons, but he is still completely wrong.

The reason he's wrong is two-fold. First off, the individual protons don't need to get from the core to the surface for the net charge to be redistributed there. That part I already detailed, though BAC hasn't seemed to clue in yet about why that's the case. The second reason which I didn't discuss before is that photons inside the sun are assumed to move in a random walk. A random walk means you spend as much time going backwards as you do going forward. Some of the photons in this average will get close to the surface then wander back into the core multiple times before finally escaping. With the redistribution of net charge, however, it's not a random walk process, it's a completely directed process.
 
The comet stuff is eye opening. Maybe somebody should start a THREAD about them.

I realize the subject diverges greatly from the original/intended topic. My aim was to target the cometary woo that surfaced rather than further derail the convo. Had I been more familiar with the poster's history I likely wouldn't have bothered.
 

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