tusenfem
Illuminator
- Joined
- May 27, 2008
- Messages
- 3,306
There is a huge problem with metals and nucleosynthesis as well as elemental abundance in the standard model.
I hope you do know that "metals" in astrophysics is everything heavier than Helium.
There is a huge problem with metals and nucleosynthesis as well as elemental abundance in the standard model.
Yeah, I knew about that one, but it didn't seem to apply to the solar surface; nor did the Faraday dark space in a cold cathode glow tube.
I saw that one, also, but did not see how it would apply, either.
I had the same search results, and came to the same conclusion. Sometimes these guys absolutely astound me.
Cheers,
Dave
LOVED that.That is actually an accepted concept among Classic British Automobile circles. Lucas Replacement smoke is precious . . . .
http://www3.telus.net/bc_triumph_registry/smoke.htm

No. This will be my crash and burn alone...![]()
How does it cool down? If its 10000F (5537 C) at the peak of the loop how does it loose not only the energy inherent in it's temperature but also the huge amount of gravitational potential energy that it had when it was at the top of the loop....
1. This falling coronal rain is a falling solid that is cooling back down to the temperature of solid iron, 1000C, from almost 10,000F at the top of the loops, which happens to be ...... 5,537.77778 degrees Celsius.
...
Yeah, but think of the benefits of having a Sterling Refrigerator!I must remember that according to you that I'll be cooled down by going for a run, that doing work can cool me down... Oh, and that Sterling Engines don't work as well...
Wow, brantc has reached another lowest point in understanding basic physics, I did not think it could go any lower after the MRx discussion.
First asked 2 April 2010
brantc,
How thick is "thick"?
Yeah, but think of the benefits of having a Sterling Refrigerator!
A bit of ignorance here:
What causes barrel-shaped supernova remnants?
- The Sun was not formed in a supernova. The gas cloud that it formed from included elements from supernovae.
- Supernova are exploding stars. The idea that supernova are some sort of pinches is really stupid but I am sure you can cite the published literature on this.
Well, they actually HAVE made chiller units (heat pumps) using a sort-of reverse Stirling (Sterling ?) cycle using a mechanical (acoustic) input and producing a delta-T output for heat transfer. ISTR it was a Navy/Sandia/LANL/DOD type project used for shipboard electronics cooling.
I will try to find the links, later, when I have time.
Preface of "Thermoacoustics: A unifying perspective for some engines and refrigerators" :
I'm thrilled by the power density and efficiency recently achieved by thermoacoustic engines and refrigerators, and I'm fascinated by some of the latest developments in thermoacoustics: mixture separation via oscillating thermal diffusion [1,2]; self-excited oscillating heat pipes ("Akachi" or bubble-driven heat pipes) [3]; deliberate superposition of steady flow [4,5]. At night I often dream of a future world in which thermoacoustics is widely practiced. One dream had linear-motor-driven thermoacoustic heat pumps atop the hot-water heaters in half the homes in Phoenix, pumping heat from room air into the hot water---the production of a little cooling in the homes was a nice by-product. Another dream featured a small thermoacoustic system next to the liquid-nitrogen and liquid-oxygen dewars in back of our local hospital. This system had a thermoacoustic engine, heated by combustion of natural gas, driving several pulse-tube refrigerators, which provided the cooling necessary to liquefy air, to distill it to produce purified nitrogen and oxygen, and to reliquefy the pure gases for storage in the dewars. A third dream had hundreds of enormous combustion-powered thermoacoustic natural-gas liquefiers arrayed on an offshore platform, using the natural gas (methane) itself as the thermoacoustic working gas and filling a vacuum-insulated supertanker with cryogenic liquefied natural gas for transport to distant shores. Yet another dream showed an extensive thermoacoustic apparatus on Mars---a thermoacoustic engine driven by a small nuclear reactor produced 100 kW of acoustic power, which was piped to assorted thermoacoustic mixture separators and refrigerators, splitting atmospheric carbon dioxide and mined frozen water into pure hydrogen and oxygen and liquefying these for use in fuel cells on each of the many robots scooting around building a colony for eventual human habitation.
The dreams are always different, but they have some features in common. First, they all feature low-tech hardware: big pipes, welded steel, conventional shell-and-tube heat exchangers, molded plastic, etc. Second, I know that this simplicity is deceptive, because the technical challenge of designing this easy-to-build hardware is extreme. Third, there are no people in these dreams...because I know so few people who are skilled in thermoacoustic engineering today. So I wake up, afraid that none of this will ever happen, afraid that integrated thermoacoustic process engineering is an opportunity that will never have a chance. So I get up and I write another few paragraphs of this book, hoping to help newcomers learn basic thermoacoustics quickly, so they can go on to design, build, and debug wonderful thermoacoustic systems of all kinds.
This is an introductory book, not a full review of the current status of the field of thermoacoustics. It is evolving from the short course that I gave on this subject at the March 1999 Berlin acoustics meeting. The hardware examples used here to illustrate the elementary principles are thermoacoustics apparatus developed at Los Alamos or with our close collaborators, and the mathematical approach to the gas dynamics and power flows closely follows that pioneered by Nikolaus Rott. (Time pressure induces me to stick with topics most familiar to me! and, indeed, the Los Alamos approach to thermoacoustics has been quite successful.) Many aspects of thermoacoustics will be introduced, in an attempt to help the reader acquire both an intuitive understanding and the ability to design hardware, build it, and diagnose its performance.
Yeah, I knew about that one, but it didn't seem to apply to the solar surface; nor did the Faraday dark space in a cold cathode glow tube.
I saw that one, also, but did not see how it would apply, either.
I had the same search results, and came to the same conclusion. Sometimes these guys absolutely astound me.
Cheers,
Dave
As promised, here are a few links to get people started:
Wikipedia article
LANL (LosAlamos National Labs) page
Textbook from LANL page available as e-book
Here is an excerpt from the preface to the textbook:
Perhaps I will be able to find the USNavy reference later.
Ben and Jerry's (Ice Cream entrepreneurs) got their knickers moist a few years ago over putting T/A freezers in their stores.
There was a thread in this forum a few years ago about using T/A devices in the third world for refrigeration and cooking powered by solar.
Cheers,
Dave
What problem is that?
BB nuclosynthesisAlthough the measurement uncertainties are still considerable, the observed abundances of He-4 and D seems to be at odds with the main big bang model. Two groups, publishing papers in Physical Review Letters, 27 November 1995, assess this discrepancy. One group (N. Hata et al.; contact Gary Steigman, Ohio State, 614-292-1999) suggests that although the data might be at fault, one or more factors, maybe betokening "new physics," might be at work. An example of this would be a tau neutrino with considerable mass. The other group (Craig J. Copi et al.; contact David Schramm, University of Chicago, 312-702-8202), however, suggests that within the uncertainties the data and the standard theory are still consistent with each other. (Journalists can obtain copies of the articles from AIP Public Information; physnews@aip.org)
http://www.aip.org/pnu/1995/split/pnu247-1.htm
During the 1970s, there were major efforts to find processes that could produce deuterium, which turned out to be a way of producing isotopes other than deuterium. The problem was that while the concentration of deuterium in the universe is consistent with the Big Bang model as a whole, it is too high to be consistent with a model that presumes that most of the universe consists of protons and neutrons. If one assumes that all of the universe consists of protons and neutrons, the density of the universe is such that much of the currently observed deuterium would have been burned into helium-4.
This inconsistency between observations of deuterium and observations of the expansion rate of the universe led to a large effort to find processes that could produce deuterium. After a decade of effort, the consensus was that these processes are unlikely, and the standard explanation now used for the abundance of deuterium is that the universe does not consist mostly of baryons, and that non-baryonic matter (also known as dark matter) makes up most of the matter mass of the universe. This explanation is also consistent with calculations that show that a universe made mostly of protons and neutrons would be far more clumpy than is observed.
More recently, the question has changed: Precision observations of the cosmic microwave background radiation[5][6] with the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) give an independent value for the baryon-to-photon ratio. Using this value, are the BBN predictions for the abundances of light elements in agreement with the observations?
The present measurement of helium-4 indicates good agreement, and yet better agreement for helium-3. But for lithium-7, there is a significant discrepancy between BBN and WMAP, and the abundance derived from Population II stars. The discrepancy is a factor of 2.4―4.3. and is considered a problem for the original models[7], that have resulted in revised calculations of the standard BBN based on new nuclear data, and to various reevaluation proposals for primordial proton-proton nuclear reactions, especially the intensities of 7Be(n,p)7Li versus 7Be(d,p)8Be[8].
Do you also have a cheese moon theory?
A solid shell is going to form during a massive explossion? Yeah, not so much.
From wiki supernova(parroting the standard view.)
"Massive stars generate energy by the nuclear fusion of elements. Unlike the Sun, these stars possess the mass needed to fuse elements that have an atomic mass greater than hydrogen and helium. The star evolves to accommodate the fusion of these accumulating, higher mass elements, until finally a core of iron is produced."
Martian "Blueberries" in the Lab
Plasma physicist uses electric arcs to replicate the mysterious spherules on the Red Planet.
"Even before this Picture of the Day was written, the plasma physicist CJ Ransom, of Vemasat Laboratories, had set up an experiment to test the electrical explanation of concretions and Martian blueberries. He obtained a quantity of hematite and blasted it with an electric arc. The results are seen in the right half of the image above. The embedded spheres created by the arc appear to replicate many of the features of the blueberries on Mars. No other laboratory process has achieved a similar result. It should encourage further experiments using higher energies."
http://absimage.aps.org/image/MWS_APR05-2004-000006.pdf
You would need a new theory of gravity, one that takes into account experimental evidence as well as accounts for the shell, which is not as radical as you would think. Maybe gravity is surface effect!!!!Originally Posted by Ziggurat
That's an understatement. A shell is gravitationally unstable. Any perturbation and it will collapse inward. Hell, given the pressures involved, you probably wouldn't even need perturbations, the iron would simply start to flow. To stabilize an iron shell, you'd need a theory of gravity which is not only completely new, but which contradicts experimental evidence.
Actually, some stars have almost no metal, certainly not enough to form a solid shell.
Not so much, actually.
A pinch produces a cylinder, not a sphere.
You would need a new theory of gravity, one that takes into account experimental evidence as well as accounts for the shell, which is not as radical as you would think. Maybe gravity is surface effect!!!!
Absolutely. I made that one up. Its a combination of the "dark" electron flow and the Faraday Dark space.
Now what would you call the electron flow across the Dark Space???
So yeah I took a liberty. Is it technically incorrect?