Dancing David
Penultimate Amazing
Please stay on topic, please do not derail this thread.

I agree. The EU posts should be continued in the Electric universe theories here thread.Please stay on topic, please do not derail this thread.
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So EU theory is quantified in the bits of EU theory which are (apparently) the same as "mainstream" science. Ok.This is what I mean about EU theory being the "evil topic" in astronomy these days. On most topics of conversation I have found you personally to be very (extremely) reasonable and very rational. That particular comment however is simply and utterly absurd. EU theory has enjoyed both mathematical and empirical support since the work of Kristian Birkeland. It was 'refined' in it's mathematical descriptions by Dr. Charles Bruce and expressed in MHD theory by the guy the wrote MHD theory, and his first generation students. There's a ton of mathematical quantification to be found in Alfven's work alone.
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/n...eq=no_params&author=Alfven, Hannes&db_key=AST
No.Just out of curiosity, have you even bothered to read the book Comic Plasma?
Because MOND doesn't tend to contain ridiculous ideas like magnetic fields are responsible for the Suns rotation around the galactic centre? Or the surface of the Sun is made of iron? Or that there's a neutron star in the centre of the Sun perhaps?What is it with you guys and the irrational hostility towards EU theory? You do not treat EU/PC theory like any other mathematically quantified theory, not like MOND theory, not like any of your metaphysically enhanced "big dark inflated bang" theories. What's up with that?
To the best of my knowledge, the stuff Birkeland predicted that bore out to be true became good old "mainstream" physics. The stuff that was wrong was forgotten about.On most topics of conversation you seem to be highly educated on the topic and right on the money with your statements. On this topic however you begin with a ridiculous claim that ignores the whole history of this theory going all the way back go Birkeland. Birkeland by the way "predicted" (real empirical predictions by the way) "coronal loops", "jets", "high speed solar wind" and all the things that still perplex 'modern (dark age) astronomy" today.
The way to actually prove your point would be to show us all a quantitaive EU alternative to dark matter.Your response seems to be an emotional knee jerk reaction, and one based entirely on ignorance of history. I respect you a great deal which is why I'm telling you on this topic you're dead wrong.
The evidence for these things come from observation. If you have a better theory that fits the observations with the same number or fewer free parameters then please feel free to explain it to us.Oh baloney. When your BB numbers have been off by OOMs, you simply added something "dark" into the batter or stirred in a dead and invisible inflation deity into the math.
Wrong. For example, the BB theory predicted the line-shape of the CMBR and agreement has been found to an absolutely extraordinary precision.Astronomers have then tried to sweep their glaring failures of the past under the carpet with comments like:
"See look how well our new and improved metaphysical dark-inflation theory "predicts" what we observe in space?" It's like watching the Fox news channel of astronomy. You folks seem to have blatantly ignored every single failed prediction that ever happened. Astronomers tend to ignore the historical reality that BB theory has *NEVER* accurately matched 'prediction". It's been "postdicted" together with metaphysical band-aids since Guth started the trend back in the early 70's. It's been down(metaphysical)hill ever since.
Can you demonstrate neutron stars in a lab? Or even just neutron degenerate matter?EU does in fact suffer from a critical handicap in terms of "competing" with metaphysics. It is restricted to what *can* be physically and empirically demonstrated to work in lab. One is of course allowed to "scale" a known and demonstrated process, but in EU theory you can't toss "magic energy" into the equations.
The measurement of the CMBR was real empirical physics. Its agreement with the "mainstream" cosmological paradigm is just stunning.It therefore takes a bit longer to work out a 'real solution' based on real (empirical) physics.
Perhaps your EU theory could explain the empirical CMBR observations then?On this topic, I'm willing to be patient and put my trust empirical physics.
There are no "inflation deities", alive or dead.On the other hand I have no faith at all in 96% of current theory or any of the dead inflation deities to choose from these days.
It's essentially impossible to stay on topic in a discussion with MM. His view of science differs so radically from that of scientists, and his ignorance of the relevant physics is so complete, that it's not really possible to maintain a discussion without it falling into one of the many gaps that creates.
Still, the thread was probably doing better without me and I'm basically uninterested in reading anything MM writes, so perhaps it's better I bow out of it.
There is for once an element of truth to that. Electromagnetism and classical gravity are extremely well-understood theories. The quantum version of E&M in particular is in a specific sense the best-tested scientific theory in the history of the human race. As a result, we know absolutely for certain that EU is a complete and utter failure at describing the universe.
It's not even close, it's not even in the ballpark, and we can be so confident precisely because we understand E&M so very well.
Theories of dark matter, on the other hand, are far less well understood. Really there's a family of theories, a few of which might succeed in accounting for the current data. Since the rules are much less well known, there is indeed much more "wiggle room".
Now that you have your usual rant out of your system do you want to get back to some actual science?...snipped usual non-science rant...
So EU theory is quantified in the bits of EU theory which are (apparently) the same as "mainstream" science. Ok.
No.
Because MOND doesn't tend to contain ridiculous ideas like magnetic fields are responsible for the Suns rotation around the galactic centre?
Or the surface of the Sun is made of iron? Or that there's a neutron star in the centre of the Sun perhaps?
To the best of my knowledge, the stuff Birkeland predicted that bore out to be true became good old "mainstream" physics. The stuff that was wrong was forgotten about.
The way to actually prove your point would be to show us all a quantitaive EU alternative to dark matter.
The evidence for these things come from observation. If you have a better theory that fits the observations with the same number or fewer free parameters then please feel free to explain it to us.
Wrong. For example, the BB theory predicted the line-shape of the CMBR and agreement has been found to an absolutely extraordinary precision.
Can you demonstrate neutron stars in a lab? Or even just neutron degenerate matter?
The measurement of the CMBR was real empirical physics. Its agreement with the "mainstream" cosmological paradigm is just stunning.
Perhaps your EU theory could explain the empirical CMBR observations then?
There are no "inflation deities", alive or dead.
Now that you have your usual rant out of your system do you want to get back to some actual science?
As stated twice before:Sure. In your opinion, what's keeping the ICM at extremely high temperatures "normally" (in other words, forget collisions for the time being)?
Heating
The ICM is heated to high temperatures by the gravitational energy released by the formation of the cluster from smaller structures. Kinetic energy gained from the gravitational field is converted to thermal energy by shocks. The high temperature ensures that the elements present in the ICM are ionised. Light elements in the ICM have all the electrons removed from their nuclei.
As stated twice before:
Intracluster medium
The ICM is heated to high temperatures by the gravitational energy released by the formation of the cluster from smaller structures.
In astronomy, the intracluster medium (or ICM) is the superheated gas present at the center of a galaxy cluster. This plasma is heated to temperatures of between roughly 10 and 100 megakelvins and consists mainly of ionised hydrogen and helium, containing most of the baryonic material in the cluster. The ICM strongly emits X-ray radiation.
I do not know. Ask an astronomer.What specifically does this statement mean:
How come this plasma is hotter than the interplanetary plasma?
I do not know. Ask an astronomer.
The mean free path of the particles of the ICM is about 1 lightyear. This means that these particles (whether charged or neutral) will collide over 3 million times when passing through a ICM cloud or blob with a typical thickness of 1 megaparsec.
What specifically does this statement mean:
How come this plasma is hotter than the interplanetary plasma?