Reality Check
Penultimate Amazing
Zeuzzz: I have many questions about Peratt's plasma model of galaxy formation (cosmic plasma filaments + enormous Birkeland currents + a ball of plasma result in plasmoids that look like galaxies). The main one is:
Why does he compare the results of his computer simulation which are plasma density graphs to optical photographs of galaxies?
Optical photographs of galaxies show their apparent shape. Galaxies are actually disk shaped. Spiral galaxies have spiral arms in photographs because these are regions of star formation (lots of young, bright stars). There are a couple of theories (not mutually exclusive) for this -the density waves model and the shock waves model.
The density of matter does not drop to very low values between the arms as suggested by Peratt's plasma density graphs and the plasmoid experiments that he bases his simulation on.
Others are
Why does he compare the results of his computer simulation which are plasma density graphs to optical photographs of galaxies?
Optical photographs of galaxies show their apparent shape. Galaxies are actually disk shaped. Spiral galaxies have spiral arms in photographs because these are regions of star formation (lots of young, bright stars). There are a couple of theories (not mutually exclusive) for this -the density waves model and the shock waves model.
The density of matter does not drop to very low values between the arms as suggested by Peratt's plasma density graphs and the plasmoid experiments that he bases his simulation on.
Others are
- Why don't we see this happening?
- Are cosmic plasma filaments associated with galaxies? There are images of cosmic plasma filaments (not to be confused with the cosmological filaments of galaxies) that have structures in them that look like the result of Birkeland currents. But I have not seen any evidence of associated galaxies.