Can you post your list of predictions and the results
You two are a head trip and a half. Instead of keeping this a nice friendly conversation, you both go out of your way to debase the conversation, to ignore the *ISSUES* related to science, and to make this conversation "personal" in every conceivable way. Why?
You are the one ignoring the *ISSUES* related to
science.
We are making it personal because all your posts depend on your
personal interpretation of solar images. You have presented no quantitative ways of confirming your interpretations.
What is your methodology that gives you the numbers that you quote?
(12 October 2010)
You have a track record of being wrong in your interpretations:
Why should we trust the interpretations of solar images by a person who has made so many mistakes in interpreting them?
By this point in time you must both KNOW with absolute certainty that filament eruptions are an excellent predictor of CME's and flares.
By this point in time all readers of this thread KNOW with absolute certainty that you have presened no evidence that filament eruptions are an "excellent" predictor of CME's and flares.
All the readers of this thread can see that you have made some vague predictions and have got your CME predictions wring at least one
Micheal Mozina's Oct 10, 2010 CME "prediction" fails by over 2 hours
There are three decades or more of observational support of that statement.
That is a lie.
There is a couple of months of posts of your posts in this thread.
There is the evidence that I gave you of a statistcial correlation between filament eruptions, flares and CME. That statistcal correlation is
- 95% of flares are preceded by a filament eruption.
- 55% of CME are preceded by a filament eruption.
55% is not "excellent".
The methods I used were pretty nearly identical to all the observational methods ever used, save for one small difference. I used the SDO images as well as STEREO and LASCO images to demonstrate the connection.
Another unsupported assertion.
You have displayed no knowledge of the methods used in science to predict flares and CME other what I have cited to you.
The two of you were evidently completely and totally ignorant of the connection (even in terms of the mass itself), and therefore this whole conversation has been "unnecessarily difficult".
We were unaware - like you.
We are now aware that there is a statistical correlation.
At this point I don't believe that either of you is actually interested in a "scientific" discussion.
The fact that you put scientific in quotes shows how untinterested you are in a scientific discussion.
When you actually present your science we will discuss it:
In actual fact I do not expect a scientific discussion between us.
Dark filament eruptions (yes they are dark in SDO images) are in fact a good predictor of solar CME's and solar flares. They typically provide the MASS we observe in MASS ejections.
Yes there are dark filaments in SDO images.
Yes there are dark filaments in decades of solar images in various wavelengths.
See above about the fact that you have presented no evidence for your assertion that any filament eruptions are a good predictor of solar CME and flares.
Whatever game you are playing, you cannot ignore the scientific facts.
We know what your game is ignoring the sceintifc evidence because you stated from a position of ignorance about the sceintific evidence.
You're on the wrong side of science. My successful predictions were all related to my ability to observe a filament eruption in progress and knowing that we would see a directional mass flow "soon" in lasco/cor.
You're not doing any science. You have presented few predictions and as far as I recall none have been successful. This is of course one of the idiotic things about trying to do science in an internet forum. You have no actual list of your predictions and whether they were successful. That is one of the basics that a scientist would be collecting.
But I may be wrong so:
Michael Mozina
First asked 1 November 2010
I actually think that your "method" will predict flares and CME for the trivial reason that flares and CME are produced from active regions and you are just predicting that a highyly actve active region will produce flares and CME.
But what we do not have is the raw data on which you base your assertion that your trival method is an "excellent" prediction. N.B. Excellent to me means 99% accurate. You may want to put a number to you meaning of excellent.
So an easy question for you to answer since you will be collecting the data as you go like any competent person will:
Can you post your list of predictions and the results?
The data that you are obviously collecting, should include:
- The UT time of the prediction.
- The position and UT time of the filament flare and a citation to an independent verification to its existence.
- The prediction (link to its URL) where the prediction should look like like
- There will be a CME going in this direction. That CME will be visible in X- Z hours in LASCO from that direction.
- There will be a flare will be visible in X- Z hours in LASCO from that direction.
- The results both from your observations and from an independent source.
Remember to include:
Micheal Mozina's Oct 10, 2010 CME "prediction" fails by over 2 hours
I do hope that you have been doing this basic data collection.
You're getting miffed over an hour, and ignoring the science entirely. Get real.
Micheal Mozina's Oct 10, 2010 CME "prediction" fails by over 2 hours
A prediction that fails, fails. Get real.
There is no way to sweep away this conversation.
We know this - you are an expert in creating threads that are 1000's of posts about your ideas, e.g. see the threads involving your delusion that the sun has an iron surface/crust/thickish plasma layer/whatever you are calling it today.
What exactly can I do for you two at this point?
Answer the question by presenting your science and citations.
Outstanding questions for Michael Mozina
This conversation doesn't have to be 'difficult'. You're just making it so by arguing rather than looking for possible areas of agreement. We should *ALL* be able to agree the filament eruptions are a "good" predictor of CMEs and flares. Yes? No? Maybe?
Maybe.
When you define what 'good' means.
When you present the evidence then we will evaluate it.