Moderated Iron sun with Aether batteries...

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A better question is: "Why don't you use Birkeland's suggestion and solve your solar wind problem while you're at it?". I can tell you the answer too. You're all petrified to publish anything related to electricity in space.

Hoy.

And your answer is trivially wrong bearing in mind the hundreds of papers published each year on electromagnetism in astrophysical scenarios.
 
Yeah, can we please - pretty please? - stop talking about opacity, 2D and 3D geometry, light neon plasmas, blackbody radiation, the photosphere, image artifacts, rigid RD movies, the Sun, ... ?

The sooner we skedaddle away from that topic, the better IMO ...

The basic problem here DRD is that your entire industry has a morbid, professional fear of even *THINKING* about publishing anything related to "electric universe/plasma cosmology" theory. It's your deepest darkest most hated subject under the sun. You folks fear that topic like a theist fears "satan". It's your Waterloo and you avoid it at all costs. Nobody talks about it because if they get out of line they get treated as I have been treated in this thread only their livelihood and their families pay the price.

I can take it because you can't touch me or hurt me financially. The insiders can't take it with hardcore types like you "policing" the industry. It's not safe.
 
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The basic problem here DRD is that your entire industry has a morbid, professional fear of even *THINKING* about publishing anything related to "electric universe/plasma cosmology" theory. It's your deepest darkest most hated subject under the sun. You folks fear that topic like a theist fears "satan". It's your Waterloo and you avoid it at all costs. Nobody talks about it because if they get out of line they get treated as I have been treated in this thread only their livelihood and the families pay the price.
Nobody talks about it in scientific circles because it isn't. That is it. There is no grand conspiracy No threat to livelihood or families. Nothing. If you think otherwise, please take your conspiracy theory to the appropriate thread.

I can take it because you can't touch me or hurt me financially. The insiders can't take it with hardcore types like you "policing" the industry. It's not safe.
You're on the wrong forum Michael. Please take your conspiracy theories and baseless allegations to the right thread.
 
Actually you cannot demonstrate they are not related. You claim "dark energy" makes up 70% or the universe and causes acceleration. The solar wind is accelerating. Is that "dark energy" too?

In which .... Michael rolls a bowling ball down the middle of the tennis court. The ball rips down the net and comes to a stop in a tangle of fabric. Michael claims an 'ace' because the ball is in your court.:duck:
 
DeiRenDopa said:
Yeah, can we please - pretty please? - stop talking about opacity, 2D and 3D geometry, light neon plasmas, blackbody radiation, the photosphere, image artifacts, rigid RD movies, the Sun, ... ?

The sooner we skedaddle away from that topic, the better IMO ...
The basic problem here DRD is that your entire industry has a morbid, professional fear of even *THINKING* about publishing anything related to "electric universe/plasma cosmology" theory. It's your deepest darkest most hated subject under the sun. You folks fear that topic like a theist fears "satan". It's your Waterloo and you avoid it at all costs. Nobody talks about it because if they get out of line they get treated as I have been treated in this thread only their livelihood and the families pay the price.

I can take it because you can't touch me or hurt me financially. The insiders can't take it with hardcore types like you "policing" the industry. It's not safe.
(bold added)

Yep, we can add "theory" to the list.

An odd thing for you to say MM, given the objective, independently verifiable reality (e.g. tusenfem's hundreds of posts on this topic, in many fora; his dozens of published papers; the thousands of published astrophysics papers based on plasma physics - e.g. "Magnetic fields in galaxies: I. Radio disks in local late-type galaxies" (Shabala et al. (2010)), etc, etc, etc).

But, perhaps more pertinent to the topic of this thread, what say you about my quantification of your "cathode solar model" (or is it ""cathode" solar model"?)? I mean, I know you're busy and all, with trying so hard to shift the focus of this thread away from opacity, thermodynamics, image artifacts, and so on, but when someone goes and puts some math flesh on the word bones of your core (well, for today anyway) concept, don't you think readers will find it a little, um, strange that you say nothing about it at all?
 
The basic problem here DRD is that your entire industry has a morbid, professional fear of even *THINKING* about publishing anything related to "electric universe/plasma cosmology" theory. It's your deepest darkest most hated subject under the sun. You folks fear that topic like a theist fears "satan". It's your Waterloo and you avoid it at all costs. Nobody talks about it because if they get out of line they get treated as I have been treated in this thread only their livelihood and the families pay the price.

Michael, I've raised a number of objections to your model and I'm not part of the astrophysics industry. I haven't published a paper on anything, and I don't claim to understand plasma physics or much of the SSM. But I understand some basic physics, and you've made a bunch of claims here that violate basic physics. From what I've seen of the SSM, it doesn't violate any basic physics. Your strawman version of the SSM may violate your strawman version of basic physics, but IMO that hardly constitutes a challenge to the SSM.

So you may tell yourself that some of the people on this thread are objecting to your model because they're afraid that they'd be blackballed, but that can't apply to me.

P.S. How many physicists do you actually know? I've known a few, and they'd find the notion that they're afraid of EU as being somewhere between insulting and really funny.
 
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For lurkers, the abstract of the Shabala et al. (2010) paper:
We develop an analytical model to follow the cosmological evolution of magnetic fields in disk galaxies. Our assumption is that fields are amplified from a small seed field via magnetohydrodynamical (MHD) turbulence. We further assume that this process is fast compared to other relevant timescales, and occurs principally in the cold disk gas. We follow the turbulent energy density using the Shabala & Alexander (2009) galaxy formation and evolution model. Three processes are important to the turbulent energy budget: infall of cool gas onto the disk and supernova feedback increase the turbulence; while star formation removes gas and hence turbulent energy from the cold gas. Finally, we assume that field energy is continuously transferred from the incoherent random field into an ordered field by differential galactic rotation. Model predictions are compared with observations of local late type galaxies by Fitt & Alexander (1993) and Shabala et al. (2008). The model reproduces observed magnetic field strengths and luminosities in low and intermediate-mass galaxies. These quantities are overpredicted in the most massive hosts, suggesting that inclusion of gas ejection by powerful AGNs is necessary in order to quench gas cooling and reconcile the predicted and observed magnetic field strengths.
Clearly, Shabala et al. did not get MM's memo.
 
http://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/docs/00/25/55/64/PDF/ajp-jp4199707C408.pdf

Ben, have you even been reading the links I have provided on Birkeland? That pdf will allow you to search for any word in the document. Type in "sputtering".

Jeez, Michael. That wasn't the Sun, that was a terrella---with an exposed iron surface---and with a big fat visible particle beam (powered by an external battery) aimed at it. Yes, a particle beam hitting an iron surface will sputter it.

The Sun's supposed iron surface, according to you, is hidden under 3,000 km of dense plasma. If there's a particle beam aimed at the Sun (I'm sure you will say there is) then the beam is not hitting the iron, it's hitting the dense wall of neon on top of it.

Are you claiming that some external particle beam gets through the neon to strike the iron? I sure hope not. Or are you claiming that "a particle beam hitting a neon plasma" is the same thing as sputtering? I sure hope not. Or maybe it's an internal beam inside the neon, and it hits the iron and sputters it, and the sputtered ions somehow burst through the 3000km blanket to become solar wind ions? Good heavens I hope not.

Seriously, Michael, you don't need to make up this nonsense. Say "the electric universe particle beams are hitting the neon Mozplasma and scattering its atoms, and the scattered atoms are the solar wind." That's equally nonsensical physically, but at least the words mean what they are supposed to.
 
t....

In his book, Birkeland calculates that there is more mass between the stars in the form of iron than exist in the stars themselves.

A) Where did he figure all that iron came from in his calculations?

B) How did the iron he used in his calculations get out of the gravity well of the star in the first place?

Who cares? He was wrong. Like lots of 19th-century scientists were about lots of things. Like the 1920s encyclopedia I have where they say the Sun must be a giant ball of radium. Like hundreds of mainstream publications about the luminiferous ether. Like the plum-pudding model of the atom. Like anything Harlowe Shapley wrote about the distances to "nebulae". Go dig up a 19th-century copy of Nature; you'll find that most of it is stuff we would now call wrong.
 
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Yep, we can add "theory" to the list.

And I forgot "model" too.


The terms Michael uses, the definitions of which he clearly does not understand include, but are not limited to:

  • photosphere
  • chromosphere
  • opaque
  • limb darkening
  • idiosyncratic
  • empirical
  • solar model
  • blackbody
  • rigid
  • sputtering
  • gravity
  • cathode
  • current flow
  • nuclear chemistry
  • theory
  • model
If Michael's arguments contain any of these words or phrases, we can accept the arguments as meaningless gibberish because he has demonstrated that he doesn't have the qualifications to understand them.
 
The basic problem here DRD is that your entire industry has a morbid, professional fear of even *THINKING* about publishing anything related to "electric universe/plasma cosmology" theory.

Darn right---because it's all wrong. Nobody wants to publish a pile of incorrect, already-falsified crap. It would indeed be a career-killer to stand up in front of your exam committee, a conference audience, or (gasp!) a tenure committee and tell them, "I don't actually know thermodynamics, E&M, or gravity, so I wrote down a crap hypothesis that ignores them all." Yep, academia doesn't look favorably on crappy pseudoscience.

It's your deepest darkest most hated subject under the sun. You folks fear that topic like a theist fears "satan". It's your Waterloo and you avoid it at all costs. Nobody talks about it because if they get out of line they get treated as I have been treated in this thread only their livelihood and their families pay the price.

Um. Yes, standing in front of my peers and spouting complete nonsense would indeed scare the heck out of me---but why would I want to do that? Why would I stand up and make a bunch of wrong statements that anyone with half a BA can tell are wrong? I indeed avoid such statements whenever possible. This steers me away from Bigfoot, EU, 9/11 conspiracies, and creationism.

I can take it because you can't touch me or hurt me financially. The insiders can't take it with hardcore types like you "policing" the industry. It's not safe.

So the fact that I don't believe things that I think are wrong make me a co-conspirator? Heck, what am I supposed to do with things I think are wrong? You tell me. Do you want scientists to believe wrong things? Which wrong things should I start with---Bigfoot, electric universe, Steorn, Martian canal civilizations, or 9/11 conspiracies? You tell me---as far as I can tell they're all wrong, there's not a fig to choose between them.
 
You're using your own definition of the word "model" , one that may be fine for some purposes, but has little to do with a scientific model. This explains why you think you have a solar model even though you have none of the necessary components, the composition of the Moplasma, for example.
 
This thread is currently spinning around and around with no end in sight and without any further purpose. Thanks to many knowledgeable contributors (who I would personally like to thank), it has been very informative from time to time. But Mozina's lack of education, disdain for the methods and standards of science, and his inability to learn are now making it repetitive and tedious. Mozina is a hopeless cause, condemned to a life of ignorance and self delusion. Sadly, many good people here are wasting their time.
 
What does the outdated physics in a 100 year old book have to to with the Sun

RC, have you even bothered to sit down and read his book cover to cover yet? You could have done so a couple dozen times over by now. Yes? No? Parts? What?
I have read basically all of the second volume.

Michael Mozina, have you even bothered to sit down and read his book cover to cover yet? You could have done so a couple dozen times over by now. Yes? No? Parts? What?

But yet another question arises:
First asked 13 May 2010
Michael Mozina,
What does the outdated physics in a 100 year old book have to to with our modern knowledge of the Sun?

Should we use even older solar physics text books as a modern text books, e.g. the models of the Sun as a ball of radium?
 
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