Michael Mozina wrote:Whereas I personally am more familiar with Alfven's solar ideas and the Birkeland solar model
Michael Mozina wrote:What are the strengths and perceived weaknesses of an externally powered solar model
Jarvamundo wrote:Hi MM,Michael Mozina wrote:Whereas I personally am more familiar with Alfven's solar ideas and the Birkeland solar model
To my knowledge Birkeland's experiments were always 'powered' externally ( in photos see his attached capacitor bank, transformers and large wires connected to his discharge apparatus, and eventually into a socket in the wall). It also seemed that Alfven was also atleast in part suggestive of external circuits providing energy to atleast some stellar phenomena, see Peratt & Healy properties of magnetospheres (ref http://adsabs.harvard.edu/full/1995Ap%26SS.227..229H).
Michael Mozina wrote:What are the strengths and perceived weaknesses of an externally powered solar model
* Neutrino "osillation" "solutions" do not need to be invoked. See philosophical arguments: http://electric-cosmos.org/Rejoinder.pdf
* Solar corona heating problem resolved.
* Complete spectral changes / stellar evolutions resolved.
and more at: ref: http://electric-cosmos.org/hrdiagr.htm
The above should be considered deathblows to the gravity blob fusion, ya know.. if one likes to stick to engineerable philosophy.
Reality Check wrote:Hi Michael Mozina,
Alfven had no model of the Sun as far as I know - citation please (and not to his model of solar flares). His "model" would have been the the model that astronomers have used for decades.
Birkeland did speculate that the Sun was powered by "transmutation of elements" but he was thinking about elements such as radium decaying naturally. He was wrong (there is not enough radioactive material in the Sun to power it).
It was Eddington in 1926 who suggested the first viable "transmutation of elements" theory and that involved converting hydrogen into helium.
Michael Mozina wrote:Well, of course you are right about his "experiments" being powered externally, but when describing the power source of the sun, he specifically mentions fissionable elements (by name) and talks about a "transmutation of elements" in some of his interviews.
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.h ... 5B838DF1D3
If you click on the PDF link, you can read the whole article. It's worth a read.
Prof D Scott wrote:n the Electric Sun model it is clear that the photosphere is the site of a strong plasma arc discharge. This produces the Sun's continuous visible light spectrum. Immediately above this in the Sun’s atmosphere there is the Double Layer (DL) in which an intense, outwardly directed electric field resides. It is within this strong E-field that many heavy elements are created by z-pinch fusion. Recall that the strong E-field dethermalizes the ions in that region and thus it is the (relatively) coolest layer of the Sun's atmosphere. Light that originates in the photosphere passes through the relatively cool, newly formed heavier elements in the DL. These heavier elements selectively absorb energy from the light's spectrum and thus the absorption lines are created. In fact they are created in exactly the place where the Sun's E-field is strongest. Thus we have the ideal situation for selective broadening of those lines due to the Stark effect.
Charles thinks the Nebular Hypothesis may work if it includes EM forces. Thornhill seems to think that there is no accretion, and that stars form from plasma streams that get magnetically pinched.
" giant planets (e.g. Super Jupiters", "Super Earths") are formed in nebular clouds following supernova, coalescing around molten iron [ natural magnetic locii ? ] ejected from the exploding "parent star".
Planets are also ejected from dying solar systems prior to supernova "
[color=#8000FF]
Sparky wrote:From what I have read in the TPODS, the sun is fed by electrons "drifting" in. But the solar wind is +ions and electrons, moving away at high speed. So, how do electrons drift against that current?
Seasmith said: Thornhill's model has some recent support by Joseph and Child 2010; where they surmise that:
" giant planets (e.g. Super Jupiters", "Super Earths") are formed in nebular clouds following supernova, coalescing around molten iron [ natural magnetic locii ? ] ejected from the exploding "parent star".
January 17, 1992
... In an experiment involving an automated telescope and a sensitive electronic detection system, members of LBL's Automated Supernova Search team have found 20 supernovas, most of them in the last three years. Analysis of the data suggests that supernovas occur at least once every 30 years in galaxies like our own, and maybe even more often. In the past, supernovas were thought to occur in Milky Way-type galaxies no more than once in 100 to 300 years.
Lloyd wrote:Michael, are we going to discuss strengths and weaknesses of the theories?
Weaknesses of Oliver's are that neutronium is not known to be real and supernovae are likely not symmetrical enough to produce neutronium, i.e. neutron stars.
A weakness of most of the electrical theories is that they're very vague, whereas a strength of Charles' theory is that he's nailing down the details, while including electrical forces along with gravity.
A strength of Mathis' theory is that it eliminates the magical action at a distance forces of attraction, making them rational as oppositely vectored repulsions instead. Likewise, relying on forces of attraction is a weakness of the other theories. Of course, that requires going deeper than the macroscopic level to explain forces, but electrical theories should do that anyway. Thornhill does discuss that himself, but he still accepts forces of attraction, as far as I know.
Michael Mozina wrote:Reality Check wrote:Hi Michael Mozina,
Alfven had no model of the Sun as far as I know - citation please (and not to his model of solar flares). His "model" would have been the the model that astronomers have used for decades.
No, their model doesn't electrically interact with the heliosphere and the rest of the universe. It's not exactly the same model, although it's the same from the surface of the photosphere to the core, I'll grant you that much.
Michael Mozina wrote:[I'll grant you that Birkeland did talk mostly about fissionable element, but had he understood fusion, I'm sure he would have considered fusion as an energy source as well.
Michael Mozina wrote:[It was Eddington in 1926 who suggested the first viable "transmutation of elements" theory and that involved converting hydrogen into helium.
I suppose that would have been almost a decade after his death.
Lloyd wrote:* RC, the authoritarian dominant model of the Sun is based on the impossible Nebular Hypothesis. The nuclear furnace model predicts 3 times the number of neutrinos detected. It cannot account for any of the known features of the Sun, including the solar granules, the photosphere, the chromosphere, the corona, the solar wind, solar flares, the sunspot cycle, the densities of the layers, spicules, prominences, CMEs, surface waves etc.
Michael Mozina wrote:I actually personally "prefer" a simple fission model,
Michael Mozina wrote:I like Manuel's idea for two primary reasons.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest