BeAChooser
Banned
- Joined
- Jun 20, 2007
- Messages
- 11,716
If you choose to not address what Cuddles wrote
I did address what Cuddles wrote.
If you choose to not address what Cuddles wrote
Ergo by your posturing there was a conspiracy to supress Yukawa and Fermi.
So all my sources are just strawmen and poorly worded results? And none are peer reviewed academic papers? If you want to claim that when readers can easily see for themselves by reading this thread that's not true, I'm ok with that.![]()
My position is the default one: that cosmology is not against the laws of electromagnetism. The only proof for my claim is to read a whole textbook on cosmology and see that in fact it doesn't. You can prove they do violate them by citing just one example.By the way, you aren't quoting ANYTHING ... just making claim after claim that I show to be untrue. That works for me, too.
It seems to you.But in terms of explaining what is going on out there, it does seem to do a much better job already, without resorting to all manner of kludge and fantasy object.
You haven't answered my questuion. If it's not a black hole what is it? If they can 'explain the jets via far more mundane and provable physics' by don't you d so or provide a link that does?Well, first of all, plasma cosmology would argue that's not a black hole. They can explain the jets via far more mundane and provable physics ... physics they've demonstrated in the lab. Big Bang astrophysicists only INFER that the object is a black hole (which of course they've never actually seen or created) with the mass of all the stars in the Milky Way at the extreme edge of the universe. And how did they do that?How does plasma cosmology explain this precise object? You are always claiming it explains everything, but have provided no hard data. We don't exactly know how these supermassive black holes form, but we know they are there.
The article I cited states that [...]
Based on the above description, does anyone here understand how they arrived at the mass estimate?
Well, I delved further and found they used something called the "virial relation" [...] If after more than 30 years, we still haven't found any proof of that substance, perhaps we should be reexamining the root theorem that was used?
Neutron stars? You actually believe there are stars made entirely of neutrons ... neutronium ... a substance that science here on earth suggests is completely unstable because neutrons by themselves are unstable? And you really think that stars can rotate at the sort of speeds that are claimed for pulsars and remain intact? 38,000 RPM? Really? ROTFLOL!
Here's the more likely explanation: http://www.thunderbolts.info/tpod/2006/arch06/060123nebula.htm . Perhaps pulsars are electrical activity between binary stars or a plasma focus.
However appealing the original logic may have been to some, the neutron star model should have been discarded when pulsars were found with supposed “spin” and cooling rates that required the mathematicians to conjure ever more dense and exotic particles–like quarks–that have never been observed.
Critics of the “neutron star” hypothesis say that it is a violation of common sense to speak of matter being gravitationally compressed to the point that the orbiting electrons in an atom are forced to join with the protons in the nucleus to form neutrons
Here's the peer reviewed article that is mentioned above by Healy and Peratt: http://public.lanl.gov/alp/plasma/downloads/HealyPeratt1995.pdf. Take a look at it. It demolishes the neutron star explanation and provides another ... one consistent with the tenants of plasma cosmology.
We see the universe is expanding.You said "he existence of a singularity is not important to the Big Bang model". Cuddles said "Dark matter is not the big bang. Dark energy is not the big bang. Rotational curves are not the big bang. Nothing you have said has any bearing whatsoever on the big bang." What's that leave?![]()
A Reissner-Nordström black hole has ZERO angular momentum ... in other words it doesn't spin ... it doesn't rotate ... as is assumed in all of the cases of stellar black holes we've been discussing. Sorry, that just doesn't apply. So my challenge to you remains. If the electric sun people are right and stars are charged bodies, how could they produce the black holes that Big Bang astronomers claim are everywhere *out there*? It's a paradox.
Well, it is obvious that you don't know much. And it is relevant, because it you don't accept relativity then we are wasting our time talking about cosmology, which is an application of that theory.You don't know what I know about relativity. I haven't said anything one way or the other about it. Because that's not the focus on this thread.
No, you haven't done that. He said the same thing I said rom my very first post: that GR is not valid in the singularity. It is, however, valid outside.But I have proven that the father of relativity said black holes are not part of the theory and any theory that includes them is wrong. Or words to that effect.
I also have seen several possible explanations.
Are you saying it's NOT fusion powered ?
You're the one who posted it.
Ah! Therefore QM and GR/SR are also "ordinary physics" by that definition.
I find your condescention tiresome.
Cuddles
This doesn't seem to have been clarified so I'll put this as clearly as I can. The big bang has absolutely nothing to do with dark matter, the standard model, MOND, plasma physics, dark energy or any other theory about what makes up the universe. The big bang is based on one single point - everything in the universe is moving away from everything else, therefore at some point it must have all been in the same place. That's it.
It doesn't matter where the structure of the universe comes from, it doesn't matter what matter is made out of or what forces affect it, all of these theories just address what happens once the big bang has happened. BeAChooser clearly doesn't understand this, and therefore his understanding of any cosmology is suspect.
Dark matter might be undetectable particles that interact only with gravity. It might be regular matter that we just can't see because it isn't doing anything. It might be something else entirely. It might be gravity working differently and not matter at all. It might be other forces, known or unknown. There are valid theories about all these possibilities, and more. None of this has anything to do with the big bang. No matter which one of these theories turns out to be correct, if any of them, everything is still moving away from everything else, and the only explanation we have for this is a big bang. Of course, there are also plenty of different theories about exactly what that was and how it worked, but that's not really the point.
And why are you running from my response to your 4 questions? I'm guessing that lurkers who read what I wrote will see why.
BTW, I've actually noted several positive predictions by plasma cosmology on this thread. You've just ignored each of them. Here was just the latest. It has to do with supernova:
http://www.holoscience.com/news.php?article=re6qxnz1
http://public.lanl.gov/alp/plasma/downloads/HealyPeratt1995.pdf
http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/freeabs_all.jsp?isnumber=36024&arnumber=1707326&count=477&index=452 "The plasma Z-pinch morphology of supernova 1987A and the implications for supernova remnants ... snip ... Supernova 1987A is the closest supernova event since the invention of the telescope. It was first seen in February 1987 in the nearby Magellanic cloud, a dwarf companion galaxy of the Milky Way, and only 169,000 light years from Earth. The Hubble images of the rings of SN 1987A are spectacular and unexpected. Conventional theory did not predict the presence of the three rings nor the pattern of bright "beads" in the equatorial ring of SN 1987A. The pattern of brightening is not explained by an expanding shock front into an earlier stellar "wind". The axial shape of SN 1987A is that of a planetary nebula. It seems that new concepts are required to explain supernovae and planetary nebulae. The new discipline of plasma cosmology provides a precise analog in the form of a Z-pinch plasma discharge. The phenomena match so accurately that the number of bright beads can be accounted for and their behavior predicted. If supernovae are a plasma discharge phenomenon, the theoretical conditions for forming neutron stars and other "super-condensed" objects is not fulfilled and plasma concepts must be introduced to explain pulsar remnants of supernovae"
![]()
You have cited a couple of papers, but not on the issue I was asking you about. You claimed mainstream cosmologists violate Maxell's equations in their theories, so I wanted proof. You provided nothing but interviews in non technical sources, with people trying to explain their results without mathematics.
You haven't answered my questuion. If it's not a black hole what is it?
OK, so now neutron stars also do not exist.
Quote:
Here's the peer reviewed article that is mentioned above by Healy and Peratt: http://public.lanl.gov/alp/plasma/do...Peratt1995.pdf. Take a look at it. It demolishes the neutron star explanation and provides another ... one consistent with the tenants of plasma cosmology.
Well, this at least seems to have some mathematics. I'll read it.
We see the universe is expanding.
You really don't know anything about gravitation, do you?
But it is trivial to just combine the features of both spacetimes and have a charged and rotating black hole.
Quote:
But I have proven that the father of relativity said black holes are not part of the theory and any theory that includes them is wrong. Or words to that effect.
No, you haven't done that. He said the same thing I said rom my very first post: that GR is not valid in the singularity. It is, however, valid outside.
So, to summarise. BeAChooser claims, among other things
• That solar fusion does not work.
• That quarks do not exist (so particle physics is wrong, not only cosmology)
• That neutron stars do not exist. We need quarks to explain them!
• That you can't have charged, rotating black holes (which proves that he knows nothing about general relativity).
• That the fact that fluid elements stick to field lines in ideal MHD is 'utter nonsense' (which proves that he doesn't know anything about plasma physics, for all that he talks about it).
• That plasma cosmologist are prevented from publishing in journals (he himself proved this to be false by quoting plasma cosmology papers in journals)
Problem-Solving Strategy:
1) Write down problem.
2) Think very hard.
3) Write down solution.
Dark matter and other scientific "dark areas" invite the creationist "God of the gaps" argument.I found this article interesting:
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2007-08/cxc-dmm081607.php "Dark matter mystery deepens in cosmic 'train wreck, Public release date: 16-Aug-2007"
It states that
Then it notes two possible explanations.
If the second is what it takes, then the Big Bang menagerie of invisible particles, forces and interactions just keeps growing.![]()
You don't know anything about Reissner-Nordström black holes, do you? You mentioned them as a solution to the quandary I posed.
But they don't rotate so they can't be used to explain all those supposedly rotating black holes that mainstream astronomers claim are in objects like quasars and galaxies.
So now you are trying to change the playing field. Fine.
There is something called a Kerr-Newman black hole that is both charged and rotating.
but is probably not representative of the actual metric of a physical black hole due to stability issues. ... snip ... Although it represents a generalization of the Kerr metric, it is not considered as very important for astrophysical purposes since one does not expect that realistic black holes have an important electric charge.."
Do I need to explain the part that's in bold to you?
It is currently believed that real black holes are almost certainly rotating and have very little electric charge, so that the Kerr solution should be the most applicable.
So we are back to you trying to answer my question. If the electric sun folks are right and the stars are changed bodies ... how can they make up the black holes that astronomers claim are out there? Wouldn't the charge be swallowed along with the matter and make the black hole charged?
He said that a theory that incorporates the existance of singularities (like the Big Bang and Black Hole theories do) should be avoided. It's right there in black and white.
That's not what I claim. I claim that plasma cosmologists have a explanation for all the phenomena observed on the surface of the sun and above it and that theory would preclude the need to assume there is fusion inside the sun as the mainstream theory assumes. I claim that the there's-fusion-inside-the-sun crowd can't adequately explain those phenomena and haven't actually observed fusion occurring in the sun ... just as they haven't actually observed dark matter or dark energy. It's all inferred.
Taht page you linked explaining why neutron stars are not what we think they are said that to explain them we must invoke quarks, which have never been seen. And treated them as you treat dark energy here. If you don't agree with that page and linked it in error, we'll let this one go.I've claimed nothing of the sort. But go ahead and continue with your strawmen.
The stars that mainstream astronomy claims are neutron stars certainly exist. They came from supernova that plasma cosmologists, unlike mainstream astronomers, can explain without assuming there were nuclear fires inside the star. And again, plasma cosmologists seem able to explain newly observed supernova observations that mainstream astronomers cannot explain. As to the neutron stars, again, plasma cosmologists can explain them without invoking new physics like stars full of unstable neutrons that in our labs can't exist by themselves for long.
.That's not what I said at all.That you can't have charged, rotating black holes (which proves that he knows nothing about general relativity)
But according to what I've read, physicists do not expect that black holes with a significant electric charge will be formed in nature because the electromagnetic repulsion would be about 40 orders of magnitude greater than the gravitational attraction. That makes sense.
I don't claim to be an expert. I'm only quoting real plasma physicists, electrical engineers and the father of MHD himself when I state reconnecting magnetic fields, tangled magnetic fields, plasma sticking to field lines and such are nonsense. But you go ahead and believe in your gnomes, Yllanes.That the fact that fluid elements stick to field lines in ideal MHD is 'utter nonsense' (which proves that he doesn't know anything about plasma physics, for all that he talks about it).
Again, a mischaracterization of the facts. But what's new.That plasma cosmologist are prevented from publishing in journals (he himself proved this to be false by quoting plasma cosmology papers in journals)![]()
Yet astronomy magazines will not publish articles on what plasma cosmologists have to say. Not because their peer reviewers can prove what the plasma cosmologists say is wrong, but because they challenge the dogma of those reviewers and the interest the Big Bang community has in expensive Big Bang *science*. That's why if you are interested in plasma cosmology work you have to look somewhere else than astronomy magazines and books. Is that the way *science* is supposed to work?
You know, Frank, I thought I'd just point out to everyone that even your tag line shows your adherence to the deductive method.
No wonder you like all those deductive gnomes Big Bang has come up with.
Cheers.![]()
Just because we don't understand something yet dosen't mean its not understandable ever. Thats what science means, right?
'... Theory is of value only when developed in close contact with reality.'
Originally Posted by BeAChooser
You don't know anything about Reissner-Nordström black holes, do you? You mentioned them as a solution to the quandary I posed. But they don't rotate so they can't be used to explain all those supposedly rotating black holes that mainstream astronomers claim are in objects like quasars and galaxies.
I mentioned as proof that black holes can have charge, nothing more.
But according to what I've read, physicists do not expect that black holes with a significant electric charge will be formed in nature because the electromagnetic repulsion would be about 40 orders of magnitude greater than the gravitational attraction.
Black holes can have charge. Charged black holes are called Reisser(sic)-Nördstrom black holes.
Some people call Reissner-Nordström also to rotating and charged black holes.
It is not important because stars are believed to be neutral.
Quote:
It is currently believed that real black holes are almost certainly rotating and have very little electric charge, so that the Kerr solution should be the most applicable.
The most applicable because stars are uncharged
If stars were charged, they would turn into Kerr-Newman black holes, as I already said.
You obviously had never heard about these things and are now trying to save face.
Quote:
He said that a theory that incorporates the existance of singularities (like the Big Bang and Black Hole theories do) should be avoided. It's right there in black and white.
So according to you Einstein said relativity should be avoided.
In other words, fusion is not the source of energy for the Sun according to you.
Taht page you linked explaining why neutron stars are not what we think they are said that to explain them we must invoke quarks, which have never been seen. And treated them as you treat dark energy here.
OK, so instead of saying that neutron stars do not exist, you said that neutron stars are not made of neutrons.
Are you sure you didn't say charged black holes are impossible?
If stars were charged, they would turn into charged black holes.
We don't believe charged black holes are important because we don't believe stars are charged.
Alfvén was a great physicists, but he can be wrong and he made those claims before we had quality observations in cosmology.
Originally Posted by BeAChooser
Yet astronomy magazines will not publish articles on what plasma cosmologists have to say. Not because their peer reviewers can prove what the plasma cosmologists say is wrong, but because they challenge the dogma of those reviewers and the interest the Big Bang community has in expensive Big Bang *science*. That's why if you are interested in plasma cosmology work you have to look somewhere else than astronomy magazines and books. Is that the way *science* is supposed to work?
This post proves that you have resorted to lying.
I have no interest in debating with someone who lies.
You were clearly trying to suggest to our audience that the black holes under discussion ... the ones supposedly IN NATURE that create jets due to their rotation ... can have charge. I don't think you actually knew, until I told you, that Reissner-Nordstrom black holes don't rotate.
Incorrectly. A charged, rotating black hole is called a Kerr-Newman hole, as I pointed out.
Again. PROVE IT. Post the experiment that has been done to measure the charge of the Sun.
Then, when you were proven wrong about this, you started searching the Wikipedia and found this:But according to what I've read, physicists do not expect that black holes with a significant electric charge will be formed in nature because the electromagnetic repulsion would be about 40 orders of magnitude greater than the gravitational attraction. That makes sense.
Then you apparently didn't understand what I noted in bold in this that I posted earlier: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kerr-Newman_metric "like the Kerr metric, the interior solution exists mathematically and satisfies Einstein's field equations, but is probably not representative of the actual metric of a physical black hole due to stability issues."
And those would be?
Why don't you read the thread and find out what I said.
What I posted you quoted out of context from my post.
You made it seem that I said that when the content of my post made it quite clear that what I was quoting was a statement from a source offered by someone else ... a statement that is bogus.
If you want to discuss QM and GR/SR, take it to ynot's new thread.
I find your lack of inattention, tiresome.
It has more than mathematics. It describes real experiments that prove what they are saying ... unlike the papers of Big Bang gnome supporters.
That's not what I claim. I claim that plasma cosmologists have a explanation for all the phenomena observed on the surface of the sun and above it and that theory would preclude the need to assume there is fusion inside the sun as the mainstream theory assumes.
It's all inferred.
The stars that mainstream astronomy claims are neutron stars certainly exist. They came from supernova that plasma cosmologists, unlike mainstream astronomers, can explain without assuming there were nuclear fires inside the star.
And again, plasma cosmologists seem able to explain newly observed supernova observations that mainstream astronomers cannot explain.
Duh.What you are stating as if it were fact is just an ASSUMPTION of the mainstream (Big Bang / stars-are-powered-by-fusion) astronomical community. Yet, we know that the outer layers of the sun are filled with charged particles that stream out into space. Even NASA admits this. http://www.nasa.gov/worldbook/solarsystem_worldbook.html Jupiter interacts electrically with its moons. Jupiter interacts electrically with the Sun, as does the Earth. The planets in the Solar System are charged bodies. The sun has an electric field. So how can you be so sure the sun is not a charged body when all of the above facts were basically surprises to Big Bang / stars-are-powered-by-fusion astronomers?
http://www.electric-sun.info/main.html
http://www.the-electric-universe.info/the_electric_sun.html
Prove it. Post a description of the experiment that was done to prove this. Bet you don't because there hasn't been one.
In fact, what we can actually see happening on the surface and above the surface of the sun, strongly suggests it is charged. With just this assumption, plasma cosmologists have no difficulty explaining the various phenomena (sunspots, prominences, coronal mass ejections, the coronal temperature, the suns variability, the solar wind, and a host of other features) that are observed. None of the above can the fusion model adequately begin to explain.
BTW ... I have no idea if this is legit ... but what the heck: http://www.varchive.org/bdb/week.htm "Is it feasible that the sun may be charged? ... snip ... I invited Dr. Cunningham, a young physicist, then on the staff of the Forrestal Center near Princeton, to spend an evening with me. ... snip ... Next we discussed the charge on the sun, and Dr. Cunningham maintained that the sun not only can be charged positively, but that it must be charged so, and this due to the circumstance that electrons have a much greater mobility than the protons, and thus many more electrons must have left the sun before the relatively slow-moving protons could do the same, and the protons thus left behind would be responsible for the positive charge of the sun. Thereafter positive and negative particles would leave the sun in equal numbers, but the original surplus of positive particles would permanently keep the sun positively charged. Thus in theory the sun not only can be charged, but must be so."
.......
You didn't even try to understand what they were saying. I'll grant you that their wording was probably poor. When they said "However appealing the original logic may have been to some, the neutron star model should have been discarded when pulsars were found with supposed “spin” and cooling rates that required the mathematicians to conjure ever more dense and exotic particles–like quarks–that have never been observed", they should have said
"isolated quarks" rather than quarks. The reason this is important is that found in the link (http://www.holoscience.com/views/view_strange.htm ) in that quote. Keeping in mind that the latest theories claim neutron stars are composed of "strange matter", let me quote that link "In nucleons, quarks are supposed to exist in inseparable groups of three, which is why no one has ever seen an isolated quark. But at extremely high densities of matter, quarks may become uncoupled or 'deconfined'. 'Strange matter' is a melange of deconfined up, down and strange quarks. Physicists are hoping that the new particle colliders currently under construction, such as the Larger Hadron Collider at CERN in Geneva, will create conditions extreme enough to break quarks free."
.....
And this appears to be true. Numerous sources state that isolated quarks have never been found.
Uh huh, whatever.So they may be right in stating that strange matter (which requires uncoupled quarks) has not been observed, too. Strange matter is very exotic physics.
So once again we find astrophysicists calling on bizarre and unproven physics to be ordinary to explain phenomena that plasma cosmologist have explained using truly ordinary physics that has already been demonstrated in earth laboratories many times..
Gosh Mr. Wizard, have you done that experiment yet. Have you huh huh huh? Have you made a star sizze pile of neutrons? What you haven't/And what makes you think a neutron star is stable? Can a pile of neutrons and only neutrons hang around for long in an earth lab?
Double standard!!!!!Prior to the discovery of pulsars, the astronomical community had basically rejected the idea of neutron stars for this reason. They only changed their minds because they couldn't come up with anything else to even remotely explain the phenomena of pulsars. But that doesn't change the reasons they originally rejected them.
...
Which would then be unstable, according to the physicists? Right?
Prove they aren't. Your repeating this with no proof at all is tiresome.
Fanatic.....
By all means, point out the articles on plasma cosmology in any recent astronomy magazine or chapters on plasma cosmology in any mainstream astronomy book. Tick tick tick ...
Look in a mirror. ROTFLOL!
The Sun may be powered, not from within itself, but from outside, by the electric (Birkeland) currents that flow in our arm of our galaxy as they do in all galaxies. This possibility that the Sun may be exernally powered by its galactic environment is the most speculative idea in the ES hypothesis and is always attacked by critics while they ignore all the other explanatory properties of the ES model. In the Plasma Universe model, these cosmic sized, low-density currents create the galaxies and the stars within those galaxies by the electromagnetic z-pinch effect. It is only a small extrapolation to ask whether these currents remain to power those stars. Galactic currents are of low current density, but, because the sizes of the stars are large, the total current (Amperage) is high. The Sun's radiated power at any instant is due to the energy imparted by that amperage. As the Sun moves around the galactic center it may come into regions of higher or lower current density and so its output may vary both periodically and randomly.