W.D.Clinger
Philosopher
Looks like I guessed right.At this point, my best guess is that you saw a discussion of magnetic reconnection on page 1 of the paper followed by extensive references to induction within the same experiment, and misinterpreted that proximity as confirmation of your belief that magnetic reconnection and induction are the same thing.
False. True. True.Thanks for demonstrating exactly what I said in the last post. You folks have a habit of defecting the conversation from the issue (my question) by attacking the individual. The EU haters cult is fixated on attacking individuals to the COMPLETE EXCLUSION of physics.
Let me explain why it's a "show busting" question for you. Those three authors understood that "reconnection" is "discharge" process caused by "INDUCTION". They even mention Dungey's work, including his ELECTRICAL DISCHARGE paper. They even mention AND USE Alfven's work on double layer induction processes in the double layer.![]()
They demonstrated acceleration of charged particles that were moving with respect to the magnetic field created byWorse yet for you folks, they DEMONSTRATE that the actual CAUSE of particle acceleration is INDUCTION. You folks just blew your own case.
True.There is nothing "special" about "magnetic reconnection", or "magnetic flux".
False.These are euphemistic terms for "induction driven discharge" and "field aligned currents".
The magnetic flux through a surface S is ∫SB∙dS. That magnetic flux can be (and often is) nonzero even when no current is flowing through S.
You read Alfvén's Cosmic Plasma without understanding the math.FYI, you'd already know all this too if you actually bothered to educate yourself and read Alfven's book Cosmic Plasma instead of arguing from ignorance for YEARS ON END!
I read Purcell's Electricity and Magnetism, understanding most of the math.
That may explain why you don't understand the difference between "magnetic flux" and "field aligned currents", whereas I do.
It may also explain the difficulty you're having with the difference between induction and magnetic reconnection.
Last edited:



