D'rok
Free Barbarian on The Land
- Joined
- Dec 29, 2006
- Messages
- 6,399
The problem is that they are feeding you a "math bunny". It looks pretty. It sounds nice. It just doesn't jive with the satellite evidence. The first movie shows the correlation between the movement of the coronal loops and the penumbral filament outline in the sunspot above the discharge zone. The second image shows at least 4-5 such discharges through the penumbral filaments. There's no possible way that LMSAL's positioning of coronal loops *ABOVE* the photosphere can possibly be correct because the influence of the loops is clearly visible on the photosphere in virtually every wavelength under the sun.
http://solarb.msfc.nasa.gov/movies/xrt_pfi_gband_20061113.mpg
http://solar-b.nao.ac.jp/QLmovies/movie_sirius/2010/03/14/FG_CAM20100314150429_174906.mpg
It's not a math bunny. It's the current technical limitation of solar imaging technology. Showing more pictures taken using such technology does not change this. Neither does any fantastical qualitative interpretation of those images.
You have a bizarre monomania that is utterly immune to reality. It makes me strangely sad.