I really don't "get" this degrading thing you folks do about "pretty pictures" when it comes to *MY* ideas, yet you rely on them *HEAVILY* in every lensing study, every inflation theory, every dark energy theory, every theory about the universe, and almost every branch of every part of science. I'm afraid that "pretty picture analysis" is a *necessary* component to any sort of scientific study and *certainly* every astronomy theory.
Science is not really done by
looking at pretty pictures as you tend to do.
Every lensing study, every inflation theory, every dark energy theory, every theory about the universe, and almost every branch of every part of science actually
analyze the pretty pictures. They extract numbers from them.
Where are your numbers?
They are large "squiggly lines" and they follow the contours of the sunspots. That would suggest that there are "many' loops traversing the photosphere in a "sheet" like structure, not unlike the things we observe in the Bastille Day flare.
They are large "squiggly lines" and they follow the contours of the sunspots. That would suggest that they are interactions of a single loop with the magnetic fields of the sunspot.
Me too, but what you're acknowledging here is that a high energy discharge is coming up and *THROUGH* the photosphere, meaning that NASA video is correct, meaning LMSAL's is "incorrect" about the loops being visible only above the photosphere.
Me too -
not.
What I am interpreting the picture as is a single coronal loop coming up.
It
is not a "high energy discharge" since we are looking at a plasma and they only support small scale discharges through charge separation (of the order of meters to be generous in the photosphere).
The NASA
conceptual animation is the standard model of coronal loops. LMSAL does not disagree with it.
The frame is of activity on and above the sunspot.
The frame is of activity on and above the photosphere.
I think that there may also be light coming from the loop below the photosphere. I am not an astronomer.
Me too, but that demonstrates that the flare is originating under the photosphere and blowing up and through the photosphere. All of these behaviors suggest that the "transition region" is *under* not over the photosphere.
Me too -
not.
The transition region is above the photosphere.
It shows that the "transition region" is not located over the photosphere, but rather it is located *under* the photosphere as Birkeland's model "predicts".
Not it does not.
Cite the section in Birkelands book where he states that the transition region is below the photosphere.
Agree, but then why is it different? In this solar model it is different because it's made of a different element, it's mostly silicon instead of mostly neon. Therefore any "discharge" through the silicon isn't necessarily going to have the same "white light" effect in the areas of the sunspots.
It is different because of what
sunspots are actually areas of intense magnetic activity as measured by scientists.
If the do that, then they could also be potentially seen *under* the photosphere as in this image.
http://www.thesurfaceofthesun.com/images/mossyohkoh.jpg
Still wrong MM - both images in that composite image are of activity above the photosphere taken in pass bands that exclude white light.
Anyone with a basic knowledge of physics know that they could will never be seen *under* the photosphere as in that image.
This is really bad science by looking at pretty pictures - you have not even investigated where the features in the image are.
There is *every* reason to believe we would see them to *SOME DEPTH*. You can whine about that 4800km figure, but try whining about 10KM or 100KM. It won't fly.
It files!
I know that basic physics tells any scientist that coronal loops are not visible in the 171A pass band under the photosphere because they are heated to > 160,000 K
above the photosphere. This is shown by analyzing coronal loops on the limb of the Sun and noting that they are cool near the photosphere and get hot a few 1000 km above it.
Well, if we go with the idea that this surface is the photosphere, then we can certainly see loops under the photosphere in all those 1600A images. There can be no doubt that we see loops coming up through the surface that is seen in 1600A.
There is not doubt that we see loops on the photosphere in the 1600A pass band. They look as if they emerge from the photosphere in the 1600A pass band.
So what?
That is what coronal loops do. That is what I have stated many times before. That is what you have stated many times before - remember the NASA conceptual animation that you like so much?
So then that composite Trace/Yohkoh image could easily relate to the photosphere surface as well, and show us that the footprints of 171A images originate far *UNDER* the surface of the photosphere.
No. The composite Trace/Yohkoh image is in the 171A and soft X-ray pass bands. All the activity is above the photosphere. It does "relate" to the photosphere in the sense that the coronal loops emerge from the photosphere.
Those 'bright loops' we see are a MINIMUM of 10K, but according to LMSAL the loops is "hot" over the whole course of the loop. In other words, it could be "millions" of degrees, not just 10,000K. If that is true, then there is no reason to believe that the 171A images originate over the photosphere and every reason to believe they would be visible through the photosphere to at least *SOME* depth.
Wrong. They are a MINIMUM of 4,000 K and a MAXIMUM of 10,000 K.
Have you grasped the fact that a pass band is a filter?
They
exclude wavelengths outside of their range. The 1600A pass band excludes the radiation from the really hot plasma. To see that you need to look at the same event in the 171A pass band.