Good morning again, David Talbott.
This is my substantive response to your post. So that the full context can be appreciated, I've added nested QUOTE boxes; so there's no misunderstanding, many of these are not in your original post.
Well now Jean Tate. Why I am I suspecting that your primary interest here is to continue a ruse about "quantification"?
I cannot know what's in your mind, David. If you want to call what I post "
a ruse", I cannot stop you.
However, this is a public forum, not a private two-way conversation. The ISF members who read these posts (and non-members too) may be reading what's posted here in an attempt to understand the electric comet hypothesis ("ech"), and in particular the extent to which it is scientific and consistent with all relevant evidence (at least some member may have such aims, among others).
If you are sincere in your beliefs concerning the ech, its scientific nature, and its consistency with all relevant evidence, I respectfully suggest that you might consider responding to the content of what I write, not what you perceive to be the intent.
I see you promoting this ruse even in cases where conclusions are inescapable based on officially-announced discovery. Are we supposed to wait until someone has modeled a phenomenon mathematically before we acknowledge the critical discovery itself?
I have no idea what you're talking about David; would you care to clarify please?
Now I'm finding myself laughing every time I see you use the world "quantitative" on the front end of a challenge.
I'm glad to read that my humble posts can bring such levity into your life.
Am I overstating something when I suggest that the motive is all too transparent—a desire to obscure facts that carry immediate, obvious, and far-reaching implications?
Yes.
JeanTate said:
David Talbott said:
How interesting that the electrical theorist Ralph Juergens, more than 40 years ago, stated in no uncertain terms that the longer time a comet has spent in the outermost regions of the Sun's influence, the more electrons it would contribute to its display. In this, we have a pretty good explanation as to why a sizable intruder from the outer reaches never seems to enter the solar system without becoming a comet. "Great Comets" (Halley, Hale-Bopp, Hyakutake, etc.) do indeed seem to have the most HIGHLY elliptical orbits.
Just so that I'm clear on this: if the spacecraft which have gone (or are going) out beyond Neptune's orbit - Voyager 2, New Horizons, to pick just two examples - were ever to return to the inner solar system, per the electric comet hypothesis they'd become comets?
If part of any 'no' answer involves "they would not be sizable intruders", what does size and/or 'intrusion' have to do with it?
Of course not. But then I've assumed you've followed at least a few earlier discussions of the electric comet idea and the issues posed by "asteroids" becoming "comets". An inability to adjust fully to a changing electrical environment is the whole idea of the electric comet. Not just size, but constituent materials of the moving body, the activity of the Sun, the direction of solar outbursts, the strength and configuration of the Sun's electric field, the speed of passage through this electric field, the presence of double layers around the comet, and the density of the regional environmental charge, would all (quite obviously) affect the comet's electrical response.
Thank you for the clarification.
Indeed I have read material like that, in the many links posted here; however, I am having an extremely difficult time separating what's truly in the ech (and central to it), what's wild speculation by people who are not electrical theorists, and what's in between. Then there's the apparent many changes that the ech has undergone, over the past few years, not least of which is its morphing from "theory" to "model" to (today) "hypothesis".
Of course, by now I know it's pointless to ask, but have any of these effects been quantified?
Recently you'll have surely noticed that I've started investigating the ech from a somewhat different direction than "quantification" (I get it David; the ech has nothing quantified whatsoever); namely, whether predictions published by electrical theorists can be derived from the ech, objectively, and in an independent manner.
Okay...let's see now...
JeanTate said:
David Talbott said:
Of course, it's well established that many "asteroids" have erupted with comet-like comas or tails. And though ellipticity of orbits seems to be a major factor, when considering orbits alone there is a zone of ambiguity between comets and asteroids. The ability of constituent matter to adjust to regions of different charge would surely contribute to the differences.
But this has not been investigated by electrical theorists, right?
And it came as a surprise to them, right?
As comet science began to acknowledge the breakdown of distinctions between asteroids and comets, that was a milestone admission, certainly not surprising, and we advertised it.
Sorry, but I don't think you answered my questions.
But let's try this: can you please point to a publication, by electrical theorists, stating that some asteroids will appear to have comet tails (or similar)? A publication dated before the discovery of this phenomenon.
JeanTate said:
David Talbott said:
What does not appear ambiguous is the fact that large bodies falling toward the Sun from the outermost reaches never fail to become comets. So both the ambiguous and unambiguous distinctions between comets and asteroids must be taken into account.
Within the electric comet hypothesis how - quantitatively - should such distinctions be taken into account?
Hmmm, there's that word again. Forget everything I said above. The cited distinctions should have no value, since I didn't do a single mathematical calculation.

Conceptual frameworks for developing a new understanding of cause and effect must be avoided at all costs. Just throw out equations floating in the air, and everything will come out fine.
I think you're not being honest, David. But even if you are, you surely recognize this as a strawman, don't you?
Or perhaps I could actually persuade you to drop this silliness, JeanTate, and help us persuade comet scientists to ask the most essential questions.
Sure, why not?
I suspect this may be a sterile exercise however, if only because "
the most essential questions" would have to be framed in a form which can be acted upon. In short, they'd have to be quantitative.
They're the ones who could bring with them the tools of a multi-billion dollar industry, an industry chartered to carry out observation, measurement, and analysis, including specialized mathematical modeling.
I think you may have missed the post of mine, earlier in this thread, where I said I am a zooite? As in a citizen scientist (one of ~a million) who participates in Zooniverse projects ... the one I'm currently most heavily involved with is
Radio Galaxy Zoo. As a citizen scientist, I have taught myself Python, learned how to query online databases (via SDSS'
CasJobs for example), done my own (quantitative) analyses, etc.
Although I knew essentially nothing about 'comet science' before starting to read this thread, I continue to be astonished that electrical theorists have apparently done so little actual scientific research on comets, these past several decades.
After all, wouldn't you agree that, if comet science has been guided by an incorrect idea (dirty snowball, icy dirt ball), the questions posed here actually COUNT FOR SOMETHING?
(my bold)
I think I already addressed this too, in an earlier post, but anyway.
What questions, David?
This thread is about the ech (as it should now be called, per you). The key questions to be asked should be about the ech, shouldn't they?
Sorry to say, all I can see in your recent responses is a deliberate ruse. Please dissuade me from this impression before I wander off. I do not have a high tolerance for wasting time.
Me neither.
But to repeat what I said earlier, this is not a private, two-way conversation.