dasmiller
Just the right amount of cowbell
Yes. We've discovered that Jupiter has a solid iron surface!
Well done, sir!
Yes. We've discovered that Jupiter has a solid iron surface!
Cool!Yes. We've discovered that Jupiter has a solid iron surface!
(Or maybe this just goes to show that only a true dyed-in-the-wool crackpot would fall for the optical illusion created by the dark light pixel arrangement in a running difference graph.)
Yes. We've discovered that Jupiter has a solid iron surface!
(Or maybe this just goes to show that only a true dyed-in-the-wool crackpot would fall for the optical illusion created by the dark light pixel arrangement in a running difference graph.)
Au contraire, mon ami. The Mozina model of the sun has consistently failed each & every physical test to which it has ever been subjected, with no exceptions. The Mozina model consistently & always violates the laws of physics, and in fairly obvious fashion I might add, whereas the standard physical model of the sun has been quite a rousing success. There is more than ample information to be found in this thread alone to support my assertions made here.You have consistently failed to judge this solar model based on it's specifications. The irony of course is that it was the SSM that has been shown to be in violation of the laws of physics, not my model.
There is no observational evidence to support a "highly ionized" photosphere on the sun. Your claims that there is observational evidence hinge on your rather foolish attempt to physically interpret a feature found in a press release image, later authoritatively identified as an artifact of the process by which the image was created. Your model fails the simplest tests quite badly, whereas the standard physical model of the sun survives quite comfortably.My model "predicts" light can come up and through a highly ionized atmosphere. It's your solar model that flunked the physics test.
I do not ignore the images and neither does anyone else. Indeed, why would I ignore the images, since the images definitively reject your model? It is your interpretation of the images, and not the images themselves, which the entire civilized world rejects. We all reject your interpretation of the images because your interpretation significantly violates the laws of physics, and because your interpretation is at odds with even the simplest, child level understanding of the viewing geometry.Decades of limited resolution and capability just got overturned in SDO images Tim. You seem to be ignoring the images entirely. LMSAL put the transition region in the wrong place Tim, just as I've said now for 5 years.
When did your solar theory begin predicting that? until now, you have been insisting that the transition region is under the photosphere, not the chromosphere. By the way, the standard physical model of the sun puts the transition region under the chromosphere, not inside it.That transition region denoted by the limb dimming is located under the chromosphere, not inside of it, just as my solar theory predicts.
http://aia.lmsal.com/public/firstlight.html
http://aia.lmsal.com/public/firstlight/20100408_044515/f_211_193_171.jpg
http://aia.lmsal.com/public/firstlight/20100408_013015/f_094_335_193.jpg
http://aia.lmsal.com/public/firstlight/20100408_013015/f0193.gif
I defy you to find any iron ion wavelength in SDO that doesn't have a bright horizon line, and underneath of that bright line, an opaque limb. In fact I defy you to find any TRACE high resolution image of the limb that doesn't also show that same "feature". That is not an "artifact" Tim, it's in *EVERY* iron ion limb image of the sun.
One more example of the amateur approach to image processing. One must approach the "pixel level" with caution. The pixels on the AIA detector project onto the sky with angular size 0.6 arcseconds. I can't find the assumed or measured point spread function (PSF), but if it is Nyquist sampled (as is usually the case), then the PSF is likely about twice that, or 1.2 arcseconds in diameter. In the absence of resolution enhancement, one should never trust the physical reality of anything in an image that is smaller than the point spread function (which is the smallest physical unit that can be detected by the optics), or more appropriately the point response function (which is the convolution of the point spread function of the optics and the detector pixel).You really need to get into the image at the pixel level to see these details, ...
Yes. We've discovered that Jupiter has a solid iron surface!
(Or maybe this just goes to show that only a true dyed-in-the-wool crackpot would fall for the optical illusion created by the dark light pixel arrangement in a running difference graph.)

The feature you are talking about in that image is a bright green band below the limb of the sun. That feature has been authoritatively identified as an artifact of the image creation process, by the people who actually created the image. End of story.
Mozina:
You do not have a "theory." A scientific theory is developed by people who understand scientific methods and scientific data.
One more example of the amateur approach to image processing.
There is no observational evidence to support a "highly ionized" photosphere on the sun.
I do not ignore the images and neither does anyone else.
That green light all around the limb defies the predictions of the SSM. It is not supposed to be there. The notion that limb dimming is some sort of "artifact" is absurd.
Take a picture of a ball.
Make a mark on the picture, just below the limb of the ball.
Hold the ball oriented just the same as it is in the picture.
Make a mark on the ball that matches the mark on the picture.
Is the mark on the ball under the surface of the ball?
No, the mark on the ball is on the surface of the ball.
The mark on the 2-dimensional picture appears just below the limb of the ball.
The mark on the 3-dimensional real ball appears on the part of the surface of the ball that is extended towards you as you look at it.
Birkeland would be horrified to be associated with your fantasy* of a iron crust....Birkeland's theory....
) and predicts absolutely nothing just makes it a joke. See the over 60 questions that Michael Mozina is incapable of answering.This was in reply toI was disappointed to be sure. There simply was not the resolution necessary IMO to make a convincing case. Thanks to SDO that has all changed.
Originally Posted by Michael Mozina - 02/09/2006
[Skeptic Friends Network]: I hear you on that point. I've already stuck my neck *WAY* out on a limb with the STEREO program. I'm betting the farm that they'll "discover" that the 171A, 195A, and 284A image originate *underneath* the photosphere, not above it. That's a real falsification mechanism that I'll accept as a viable way to determine which "interpretation" is accurate, and there should not be much room for error. I'm going to pay close attention to that data, I assure you. I'm interesting in both proving my case and also in falsifying it as well.
!): It is thermodynamically impossible since it must be at a temperature of at least 9400 K (as measured within the photosphere) and so be a plasma. This has been pointed out to MM many times over the years. Here are some of the explanations given to him that he continues to not be able to understand:
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