Hmm. Yet somehow "Plasma Cosmology" is different than "nuclear astrophysics" or "high-energy astrophysics" or "condensed matter physics", all of which have a "general emphasis on the importance of X". You see, most subfields of physics don't declare that a large fraction of the work outside of their emphasis is wrong. Ultracold atom researchers do not, by and large, write long anti-LHC articles in their atomic physics journals, nor accuse astrophysicists of ignoring cosmic Bose condensates.
You appear to be very confused.
Not much of what has been talked about so far would be considered strictly Plasma Cosmology material, as not much of what has been talked about has been anything to do with cosmology. Nearly everything talked about here certainly adds credencee to the plasma cosmology approach, so may be talked of under that bracket, but little direct
cosmology material has really been discussed yet.
I really think that I need to explain what plasma cosmology is again, and I think that the confusion is over the term 'cosmology'.
Plasma cosmology is an alternative cosmology which offers local plasma based explanations to the observations thought to prove the Big Bang. The effects of plasma in space are held in much higher regard than the conventional gravity driven Big Bang picture, and are used to explain things that would otherwise be left up to mathematical extrapolations. Most of these alternative production methods involve many of the new properties of plasma that are still being investigated to this day. Plamsa cosmology is based on the physics of the plasma universe.
The Plasma Universe. This is the science that plasma cosmology is primarily based on, and is a much more modern area of science when compared to the standard model. This was started primarily by the work of Alfven, and has been continued by his colleagues and associates ever since. Although much of Alfvens work on the physics of the plasma universe has turned out to be true, a lot of it is still deemed controversial, and most of his ideas are still rejected today, despite him having recieved a Nobel prize in this area.
Electric Universe. More speculative, involves charge on stars higher than conventionally accepted, electric stars, currents between bodies, electric comets, discharge craters, fusion on the suns surface, electric connections between boudaries, questioning validity of gravity, black holes, plasmas, etc.
Can you list several key points where plasma cosmology thinks mainstream cosmology is wrong?
Yes. I can list a few off the top of my head;
- An incredibly hot, dense volume was created out of nothing about 13.7 billion earth-time years ago
- The we can accurately know nearly exactly what the conditions were like just seconds after this event
- Three hypothetical entities are needed to help fit the observations to the cosmological theory (the inflation field, dark matter, and the dark energy field)
also;
- Many structures in the universe are older than the Universe is
- Existance of inexplicable voids
- Problems in light element abundances predictions
- Too may free parameters involved in matching the anisotropy of the microwave background with predictions (seven last time I checked)
Its basically like looking the Big Bang theory from a common sense perspective, without the ridiculous claims that often accompany it, such as "The Big Bang Explains the origin of the Universe" sort of rubbish they teach you at school. The Big Bang has never explained what the origin of the universe is, it excels at explaining how the universe evolved from an incredibly hot, dense volume about 13.7 billion earth-time years ago, but remains surprisingly silent on the 'origin' of that volume.
A Comparison of Plasma Cosmology and the Big Bang - IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON PLASMA SCIENCE, VOL. 31, NO. 6, DECEMBER 2003
THE DOMINANT theory of cosmology, the Big Bang, is contradicted by observation, and has been for some time. The theory’s predictions of light element abundance, large-scale structure, the age of the universe and the cosmic background radiation (CBR) are in clear contradiction with massive observational evidence, using almost any standard criteria for scientific
validity. This situation is not new. In 1992, I reviewed these contradictions [1], and concluded that theory had already been clearly falsified. Since that time, the evidence against the Big Bang has only strengthened. There is a second framework for cosmology–plasma cosmology. This approach, which assumes no origin in time for the universe and no hot, ultradense phase of universal evolution, uses the known laws of electromagnetism and the phenomena of plasma behavior to explain the main features of the universe.
It was pioneered by Hannes Alfven, Carl-Gunne Falthammar, and others [2]–[4] and has been developed since then by a small group of researchers including the present author and A. L. Peratt [5]–[13]. In contrast to the predictions of the Big Bang, which have been continuously falsified by observation, the predictions of plasma cosmology have continued to be verified.
The present review seeks to update the comparison between these two world systems in light of recent observations and theoretical developments, including some new results not yet published elsewhere. At the end of this review, I will consider some of the reasons why the Big Bang remains dominant in the field, despite its clear falsification by observation. In many respects
this resembles the situation of 400 years ago, when the clearly falsified Ptolemaic system remained dominant some 60 years after the introduction of the Copernican system. There is of course a third main cosmological perspective, the Steady State theory developed by Hoyle et al. [14]. However a systematic comparison of plasma cosmology and the Steady State theory requires its own article and is outside the scope of this review.
I don't quite know how to express how wrong that is. If that's how it works, Plasma Cosmology is of no more use than a stopped watch that's right twice a day. It means that any confident pro-plasma statements are, in a certain sense, pure bluster. Plasma cosmology sounds like it knows what it's talking about, not because it actually knows, but because it was designed to sound that way.
Hows about you just address the plasma cosmology material and just state why it is wrong? So far you dont seem to have read any, let alone quoted any, or explored any of the links I have provided.
[*]You know what Plasma Cosmology says about many things, like coronal heating,
No. Currently they use the same model as standard astronomy for coronal heating, but they will certainly hold the 'Electric universe' theorists ideas of a global E-field causing this heating in much higer regard than conventional opinion.
Plasma cosmology have a different explanation for rotation curves?