DeiRenDopa
Master Poster
- Joined
- Feb 25, 2008
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In his (first) response to TimT's "Comments on Birkeland & Electricity & the Sun" post (#1651 in this thread), MM said (bold added):
TT: "So while it is fair to say that Birkeland did think that there was a flow of material from the sun to the earth, it is clear that his conception of the flow is both qualitatively & quantitatively different from what we now call the "solar wind"."
MM: "Er, no. It was "quantitatively different" to be sure, but the "qualitative" part is still right on the money. We know from his experiments that the key observations we're seeking to explain in solar phenomenon are in fact relate to electrical discharges. The numbers have changed to be sure, but the basic idea is sound and it works in a lab. You're confusing the notion of "quantitative differences" for "qualitative failure". There is no one to one correlation between these two ideas. Quantitatively things are different than he imagined, and even some of the physical parameters are a bit different, but the basic concept works in the lab. "
So what, to MM, is this "basic idea" that is sound, even if it is ""quantitatively different""?
The "works in a lab" part is, of course, true ... by definition (as can be verified by repeating Birkeland's experiments).
Here's what MM says it is (refer to the 994-page Birkeland material for a full description)(post#1534):
But what is the basic idea that is sound when it comes to the solar wind?
MM states it several times in this thread, in somewhat different ways*, but these are particularly clear:
(source) "Solar wind acceleration is not a "mystery". It was "explained' and 'simulated' in a lab, over 100 years ago. It is 'caused' by charge separation between the photosphere and heliosphere. [...] This was all demonstrated in a lab over 100 years ago."
(source) "We're sitting inside of a "current flow' between the surface of the sun and the heliosphere."
(MM's first response to TT's post, cited above) "[Birkeland] suggested [the Sun] was "discharging" itself toward the heliosphere."
One point to immediately clarify is what is the "heliosphere" MM is referring to.
It's not a term that Birkeland uses**.
And the normal meaning of the word, today, is that it's what the solar system is in ... i.e. a bubble that is centred on the Sun and extends to where the solar wind begins interacting with the ISM (inter-stellar medium) at the heliopause or heliosheath (to distinguish it from the regions immediately around planets - especially the Earth and Jupiter - it has the same meaning as the inter-planetary medium). As such what MM says makes no sense ... so perhaps he means the heliopause? or the heliosheath?
So the basic idea that is (qualitatively) sound is that the solar wind is a kind of discharge process (according to MM).
If so, then we have a proposed mechanism, a process, that can be used to formulate testable hypotheses, which we can then proceed to test. And we can do this quite independently of whatever experiments Birkeland conducted in his lab.
OK so far? Any clarifications needed? Did I misunderstand what you wrote MM (in any significant way)?
(to be continued)
* for example in posts 134, 367, 600, and 645.
** or if it is, I couldn't find it; inputs welcome!
TT: "So while it is fair to say that Birkeland did think that there was a flow of material from the sun to the earth, it is clear that his conception of the flow is both qualitatively & quantitatively different from what we now call the "solar wind"."
MM: "Er, no. It was "quantitatively different" to be sure, but the "qualitative" part is still right on the money. We know from his experiments that the key observations we're seeking to explain in solar phenomenon are in fact relate to electrical discharges. The numbers have changed to be sure, but the basic idea is sound and it works in a lab. You're confusing the notion of "quantitative differences" for "qualitative failure". There is no one to one correlation between these two ideas. Quantitatively things are different than he imagined, and even some of the physical parameters are a bit different, but the basic concept works in the lab. "
So what, to MM, is this "basic idea" that is sound, even if it is ""quantitatively different""?
The "works in a lab" part is, of course, true ... by definition (as can be verified by repeating Birkeland's experiments).
Here's what MM says it is (refer to the 994-page Birkeland material for a full description)(post#1534):
[Birkeland] charged the sphere [representing the Sun] as a cathode relative to the chamber walls
But what is the basic idea that is sound when it comes to the solar wind?
MM states it several times in this thread, in somewhat different ways*, but these are particularly clear:
(source) "Solar wind acceleration is not a "mystery". It was "explained' and 'simulated' in a lab, over 100 years ago. It is 'caused' by charge separation between the photosphere and heliosphere. [...] This was all demonstrated in a lab over 100 years ago."
(source) "We're sitting inside of a "current flow' between the surface of the sun and the heliosphere."
(MM's first response to TT's post, cited above) "[Birkeland] suggested [the Sun] was "discharging" itself toward the heliosphere."
One point to immediately clarify is what is the "heliosphere" MM is referring to.
It's not a term that Birkeland uses**.
And the normal meaning of the word, today, is that it's what the solar system is in ... i.e. a bubble that is centred on the Sun and extends to where the solar wind begins interacting with the ISM (inter-stellar medium) at the heliopause or heliosheath (to distinguish it from the regions immediately around planets - especially the Earth and Jupiter - it has the same meaning as the inter-planetary medium). As such what MM says makes no sense ... so perhaps he means the heliopause? or the heliosheath?
So the basic idea that is (qualitatively) sound is that the solar wind is a kind of discharge process (according to MM).
If so, then we have a proposed mechanism, a process, that can be used to formulate testable hypotheses, which we can then proceed to test. And we can do this quite independently of whatever experiments Birkeland conducted in his lab.
OK so far? Any clarifications needed? Did I misunderstand what you wrote MM (in any significant way)?
(to be continued)
* for example in posts 134, 367, 600, and 645.
** or if it is, I couldn't find it; inputs welcome!
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