The title of this thread is
Lambda-CDM theory - Woo or not?. We are off on some tangent about plasma that really belongs in the other discussion on plasma cosmology, and off on some tangent about electricity and the sun that belongs off in a thread of its own. So I would like to take the opportunity to return to the title topic.
- Question: Lambda-CDM theory - Woo or not?
- Answer: Certainly not
Just because one person, or even a few people think it is "woo" does not make it so. Just because some really smart person or a few really smart people think it is "woo" does not make it so. Even if at least one Nobel Prize winner though that it was "woo" does not make it so. Despite some feelings to the contrary, science actually is in part determined by consensus. But is is a moving consensus, not a fixed consensus. Opinions change, and indeed whole scientific disciplines change from time to time, sometimes significantly so.
I agree with everything you said to this point in the post.
In the context of physics as we know it today, there simply is no cosmological theory which can muster the level of observational support that the concordance model of cosmology (Lambda - CDM cosmology) can muster.
Well, that's not exactly a mystery now is it? The whole thing has been a "curve fitting exercise" from the very start. Guth curve fit the inflation thing into place, and Lambda-CMD filled in the "gaps" rather liberally (75%) with "dark energy" and more gap filler in the form of "dark matter". How could it not fit the postdicted observations with almost 96% metaphysical "gap filler"?
Indeed, plasma cosmology is no longer a serious contender, having lost out on merit,
Sorry Tim, but from my vantage point that sounds like a flat earth "believer" telling me that a round earth theory is no longer a serious contender.

Birkeland's ideas work in a lab and "explain" many observations in space that modern cosmology theories have not explained. PC theory started over 100 years ago and it is going to be around long after both of us are dead and buried.
pure & simple, to big bang cosmology, during the cosmology wars of the 50's & 60's, and on into the 80's. Lambda-CDM cosmology is indeed the last cosmology standing.
It's the most "popular" theory at this particular moment in time. So? I've seen a lot of cosmology theories come and go over time, especially the 'prophetic' variety.
It is consistent with the original observations of Edwin Hubble (
Hubble, 1929), and remains consistent with the current observations of high redshift type-Ia supernovae (
Wood-Vasey, et al., 2007).
But any sort of expansion would do.
http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0601171
That doesn't necessitate or validate "inflation" or "dark energy", or "SUSY" brands of "dark matter" theory. Without these little fudge factors, your curve fitting exercise is toast.
Indeed, better than the minimum requirement of being consistent with the observations, an examination of multiple cosmological models against the supernova data shows that the standard, Lambda-CDM cosmology is in fact statistically favored (
Davis, et al., 2007).

Come now. You must realize how silly that sounds. You do realize that I'm old enough to have seen "dark energy" stuffed into cosmology theories, correct? When it fails, stuff it liberally with any ad hoc terminology and a wee bit of math, and viola, an "new and improved", "statistically favored" theory is born, and all the old ones bite the dust.
It is also consistent with observations of the cosmic microwave background (
Dunkley, et al., 2009).
Sure, but so might a lot of things be consistent with some elements of the microwave background. That by itself is not enough to validate a whole cosmology theory based on 3 different non empirically demonstrated entities/terminologies.
Inflation is a perfectly valid concept,
How so? What other *physically demonstrated* force of nature is even remotely like "inflation", and can undergo multiple exponential increases in volume with little or no reduction in density? Light and the EM field certainly don't act that way.
and the constant complaint that inflation cannot be directly observed in a laboratory is so weak as to be almost irrelevant.
In this case however it's not only that this idea cannot be directly observed, it is also that you expect me to believe that it is inconveniently gone forever and can *never* be tested in any empirical context. That's pure "faith".
The fact remains that inflation passes the observational test of being consistent with physics as we know it
Er, only if we suddenly "know" that some new force of nature exist(ed) and and is now gone? I'm sorry, but the notion that "dark energy" or "inflation" is "consistent" with "physics as we know it" is like claiming God is consistent with physics as we know it. Sure, I suppose that's possible, but then what isn't "possible" to include in that list if we start allowing for non empirically demonstrated things?
Note that my purpose is not to assert that Lambda-CDM cosmology is correct, or even that it is not wrong. Rather, my point is that it is not "woo", which is clearly meant to mean something far worse than just plain wrong.
Well, by "woo", I would say it has the same exact "predictive" value in a "controlled experiment" as say numerology or astrology. Inflation is gone, so it has no effect on anything anymore so it has no usefulness today. "Dark energy" isn't even defined, so it's not even an "explanation" of anything, and again it has no "predictive" value in a controlled experiment.
SUSY theory oddly enough is the one ace up Lambdas sleeve that *may* save it from total humiliation, but other than that it has zero in the way of "predictive" value in a controlled experiment to this point in time.
Rather, the real science clearly shows that Lambda-CDM cosmology is clearly not "woo", and has good chances of being in fact "right".
By "right", do you mean *after* you physically identify what "dark matter" actually is?