If any reader is interested in answers to mharratsc questions on the observational aspects of (extra-galactic) redshift - or any other aspect of contemporary astrophysics (etc) - I'd like to suggest the following:
BAUT's Space/Astronomy Questions and Answers section
Starship Asterisk*'s The Library: Ask Questions about Astronomy section
Physics Forums' Astronomy & Cosmology section
JREF's Science, Mathematics, Medicine, and Technology section
If your questions are general, and non-technical, the first two would likely be best; for more specific questions, try Physics Forums (but be prepared for answers that assume at least a year's study of physics). JREF has some extremely knowledgeable, professional physicists among its regulars, but few observational astronomers; the other three, especially BAUT, have several of these. Oh, in case you don't already know, Starship Asterisk* is the discussion forum associated with APOD (Astronomy Picture of the Day).
If you're already signed up for a Zooinverse project, the Galaxy Zoo forum's Science Questions section (and equivalents in other Zooinverse project fora, such as Solar Stormwatch) may be an easier place to cut your teeth (so to speak).
Nereid wrote:Only if you accept the existence of physics processes which have never been seen in any lab experiment, here on Earth, and are not derivable from any part of plasma physics.mharratsc wrote:and interestingly enough- it seems to fit with plasma cosmology rather well with the notion of highly energized matter being expelled in an enormously-ionized plasma jet from the central plasmoid of a galactic core.
Parts of this thread are rapidly becoming similar to many others I've participated in, here in the Thunderbolts forum; a narrow, specific topic (or question) gets misunderstood, misrepresented, (mis-)generalised (etc), and before you know it we're thick in the middle of <irony> philosophical musings about the meaning of life </irony>.David Talbott wrote:Okay, I'm mystified again Nereid. Do you really want to have to defend this statement? Both the plasma focus device and the Wolfe Effect are real, as are other well known plasma effects, all supporting a reasonable suspicion or belief that quasars are fundamentally electrical.
Mike's comment, in context, is this (bold, highlight added):
Q. And what is this mysterious "it" Mike refers to?mharratsc wrote:However it is apparent that some few people still find it plausible to continue to investigate it, and interestingly enough- it seems to fit with plasma cosmology rather well with the notion of highly energized matter being expelled in an enormously-ionized plasma jet from the central plasmoid of a galactic core.
A. Again, in context:
Q. And what is it that "they" are observing?mharratsc wrote:Here is the thing- they are not saying they have all the answers to what they are observing. They are simply reporting what they see.
A. Redshifts (and blueshifts):
So, in context (bold added): "the existence of physics processes which have never been seen in any lab experiment, here on Earth, and are not derivable from any part of plasma physics", the physics processes are those which give rise to redshifts (as I described them) observed in the spectra of astronomical objects.Nereid wrote:The spectra of stars, planetary nebulae, HII regions, and galaxies (and many more objects besides) usually contain 'lines', which correspond to specific atomic transitions (the electron in an atom, or ion, 'jumps' from one allowed level to another; if the jump is 'down' - higher energy state to a lower one - the atom or ion emits light; if 'up, it absorbs light). The 'rest wavelengths' of the lines are very well known, either from high precision lab experiments or theory (e.g. many 'nebular lines' have never been observed in labs - we can't create vacuums hard enough for long enough). The difference between the observed wavelength (from the spectrum of the astronomical object) and the rest wavelength is called redshift, in the sense of (observed) - (rest). Note that negative redshifts are sometimes called blueshifts.
In brief, the only part of this: "the plasma focus device and the Wolfe Effect are real, as are other well known plasma effects, all supporting a reasonable suspicion or belief that quasars are fundamentally electrical." which is relevant to my post is "the Wolfe Effect"1 (and, possibly, "other well known plasma effects").
If I may quote your own words, David T:
Could the Wolf effect be the cause of the observed redshift of AGNs (per an observational definition; quasars - however defined - are a subset of AGNs)?David Talbott wrote:When a fact outside one's specialized field of view falsifies a theoretical assumption, common sense should direct the attention of the specialist to this contrary fact. All that is left when the specialist ignores common sense is denial.
Never say never of course, but if I assume the "specialized field of view" is EU theory (or plasma cosmology in general), and if I assume that the "theoretical assumption" is that the Wolf effect is the cause of (most of) the redshift of AGNs (per their observed spectra), then the "fact" (actually tens of thousands of them) is existence of lines from "Lambertian sources" in those spectra, along with those assumed (by the writer of the webpage you provided a link to) to be from "non-Lambertian sources".
And what are those Lambertian sources? Why none other than "the blackbody radiation from stellar surfaces"!
Yes, that's right; the spectra of tens of thousands of AGNs can be interpreted as containing lines produced by ordinary stars, as well as H-alpha, [OIII] (several lines), H-beta, and so on (all in emission) ... and the redshifts are the same.
Aristarchus, my response to your lengthy post will have to wait for another day.
Yes, he did (get it wrong).davesmith_au wrote:<tongue in cheek>
Well, obviously, Brynjolfsson got it wrong so we can dustbin his work, too!
</tongue in cheek>
If you read the document in the link Aristarchus provided, where Brynjolfsson presents what I'll write in shorthand as 'the physics case' for his particular 'plasma redshift' concept2, you'll see that he's made at least one mistake with regard to textbook physics his concept is developed using. I would guess - but do not know - that it is these mistakes (and Brynjolfsson's continued inability to fix them) which have been a key reason why none of his papers has ever been published in a relevant, peer-reviewed physics journal. Contrast this with Leif Holmlid's MNRAS paper; the underlying physics - which he worked on for many years - is well-established (his application of it to astronomy is new, of course).
1 From the context, I think you made a typo, David T; the Wolfe effect - usually called the Sachs-Wolfe effect - is something very different!
2 This is important, because there is more than one 'plasma redshift' concept. The ones that I am aware of, including Brynjolfsson's (and the Plasma Universe one, on the Wolf effect), are mutually inconsistent; in other words, no more than one can be 'right'; specifically, the Wolf effect and Brynjolfsson's plasma redshift are mutually inconsistent (as explanations of the observed redshifts of AGNs).