The scaling of plasmas or the theory does not matter. The only way that magnetic forces can move stars around are the options in the previous post (stars with billions of coulombs of charge, magnetic fields that are billions of times greater than those we have measured in galaxies or both). This is a consequence of basic physics.
Who claimed that magnetic forces could
considerably move stars? I have never claimed that, and I have been very careful not to, as I know how hard it is to explain using standard EM forces
in gas and a small charge on the sun. It easy to imply this from Peratts model, but gravity can not be simply ingored. Thus why in Peratts model he includes the mass of the plasmoid and the resulting gravity, this would be main force that acts on planetary level bodies like the sun and stars (dont make me quote the hundreds of times I have said that gravity dominates on the planetary level) I have said that the charge may be able to account for a tiny amount in gases, but compared to gravity, it would be negligable. And why I have stated a lot of times that he is dealing on scale completely different to that of individual stars. Plus, no one has ever measured the strength of the charge on the sun or stars accurately (or at all infact!), so anything using a vlaue on the charge of stars would be hypothesis (I discussed the charge on stars and potential charge they could contain at length in the "something new under the sun" thread, and others, and no, its not likely to be any more than 10
4±2) If you thought that the claim was that stars are kept
in orbit by magnetic forces, then that is wrong. The EM forces in this model would effect the interstellar plasma (yes, plasma, not gas) to a much higher degree, and that is for sure. The relationship with the stars and their surrounding dusty plasma environment is the main question that has to be answered. Simple EM calculations between bodies are misleading too,
ionized plasma organizes itself into a cellular structure, and double layers structure themselves such that electrostatic forces between bodies that are each surrounded by such DL-bounded plasma cells are negligibly weak. "
Homogeneous models often are found to be misleading and should be replaced by inhomogeneous models, with the inhomogeneities being produced by filamentary currents and DLs that divide space into separate cells of plasma." If they did obey a strict inverse square law (as they are often modelled as by standard astrophysicists) galactic magnetic fields would not be the size they are, they often reach from galactic centres right to the very ends of galaxies.
As I stated before and you have seen in several posts in several threads:
Magnetic forces can only account for roughly 1 part in 1022 of the Sun's acceleration due to its orbit in the galaxy.
This estimate is true for all stars at our distance from the galactic center. It is probably true for all stars in all galaxies.
It is well known that the EM force is 10
39 times stronger than gravity, and since it is now known that the stars, ISM and all solar winds are ionized plasma (only quite recently really, most models
still use neutral gas), this force can potentially play a role on the large scale. By definition, plasmas are an interactive mix of charged particles, neutrals, and fields that exhibit
collective complex effects. In plasmas, charged particles are subject to long-range, collective Coulomb interactions with many distant connections. Although the electrostatic/magnetostatic force drops with distance (~1/r
2), the combined effect of all charged particles does not necissarily decay because the interacting volume increases as r
3, leaving room for a considerable role where plasmas exist. Magnetic field effects are often global with their connections reaching to galactic scales and beyond, which does not conform with the usual ranges implied from models of them in neutral gasses. Mainstream astronomy is full of a lot of hot gas at the moment. Few people have realized the full implications that this state of matter has on the old theories they use, especially gas dynamic theories that are used nearly everywhere.
The statement that "The EM force is 10
39 time stronger than gravity" can be misleading, and this is where you have to take into account varying size scales, to understand what occurs at the different levels. And the galactic magnetic field structure is not very known at all, as its very hard to determine the magnetic field in space unless it belongs to a considerably large object (pulsar, neutron star, "black hole", etc), and even then you can only determine the approximate field strenght at that object, the surrounding ISM environment is much harder, as few EM signals are sent from these regions. Infact, the magnetic field structures of galaxies is a bit of a mystery, with conflicting values often acheived depending on which method is used. (Ref:
The Galactic magnetic Fields - National Astronomical Observatories (cool paper, check out the toroidal structure on page four, which is what would be expected from a unipolar inductor/faraday motor model with the central current) "
3.5. Unresolved problems.
If one compares what we knew with the list for what we want to know, it is true that we know very little. We are far away to have a full picture of Galactic magnetic Fields. Here are some problems which should be solved in next years [...] "
EM forces in
gas can not account for much at all. Its when you apply these forces in plasma that the many and varied effects of plasma could start to take control.
1. What in PC as you know it can accelerate stars faster than gravity minus dark matter? Which is why ii mentioned Perrat, BAC and I believe you have provided Perrat's model as an explanation of 'flat rotation curves' in galaxies.
Another thing that you may have not considered is that Peratts model is fundamentally different as it is an interatcion between
two plasmoids, and so the gravity from this different structure in itself may beable to account for rotation of stars without the need for dark matter. Current theories use only the
central mass, which is essentailly why the whole problem of flat rotation curves arrises. I'm not sure, I would have to consider this at length, but that is a possibility...
I have seen published estimates that galactic electromagnetic fields can account for approximately 10% of the galactic rotational discrepancy at large radii.
Yep. There are a few papers that have considered this possibility recently due to the potential of plasma interactions... some astronomers do seem to be catching on with what the PC crowd have been saying;
Are rotation curves in NGC 6946 and the Milky Way magnetically supported?
and theres a few more about.... but its hard to find them in the midst of all the papers that pop up which all seem obsessed with calling everything in space a neutral gas, and so obviously will arrive at largely erroneous conclusions...
Its also hard to account for the abundance of electric currents that have been observed connecting bodies throughout the ism if it is all neutral gas, currents can not travel very well at all through gas, it has to be plasma;