CaveDave
Semicentenarian Troglodyte
Yeah "in a lab", but last time I looked. labs could not duplicate Solar conditions.No, 100 year old experiments that show "electric universe" theories work in a lab, unlike 95+ percent of mainstream mumbo jumbo.
And just WHERE do you come up with your fanciful percentages? I submit that you pull them from your rectum -- prove me wrong.
You certainly do more than enough harping for 100 cranks, but you have demonstrated no real understanding of Physics so far.I think you folks need someone harping on you about the value of real physics. You folks seem to have no clue how to tell the difference between a "real physical force" like an EM field and some crap you simulate on a computer related to invisible fairy energy.
If you have evidence for the imaginings of your fevered "mind", then by all means collect them, write the papers, and relax while the Nobel Committee decides to award you the the Prize. Time's a wastin' -- get started.
And you seem to support vulcanism further downpost. Hmmm.Well, if you mean a volcanic event, sure.
Just as one could imagine Linus Pauling's consternation at seeing his vitamin-C concepts shot down in flames.I can just imagine Birkeland's reaction at seeing your confusion about the cause of solar wind.....
Being once-genius has never implied being always-genius, but, what was your point?
OK. You tell us.Do you folks do anything other than belittle the value of "observation"? Did it look like a tsunami, yes or no? Was it in fact a wave on the photosphere, yes or no? What are those rigid outlines under the wave?
Alright, now enlighten us on what exactly you envision as as supporting this "shell" that doesn't violate thermodynamics or the observed mass/size -- AKA density.No, I was talking about the crust itself, not the entire sun. Even parts of the surface are "volcanically active" and not necessarily solid per se. The sun itself isn't dense enough to be entirely solid.
Even if that were completely true, so what? Mainstream theory can't make something as simple as solar wind work in a lab, and you aren't abandoning that theory. The mainstream has never demonstrated sustained fusion either. You still aren't abandoning fusion sun theory. What's the big deal with a few "unexplained" aspects of any theory?
Well, you could start at "does it match what we already have massive evidentiary and theoretical support for?" and go on towards "OK, we see something unexpected here, what is that trying to tell us" and on from there.
Oh wait, you weren't talking "observations" were you, you said "What's the big deal with a few "unexplained" aspects of any theory?", didn't you? Well, that doesn't sound like anything a self-respecting scientist would want to propose with his name attached. {I could be off base here, and trust that some REAL scientist will correct me.
Cheers,
Dave

