Interior of the sun, chain of discovery

Beyond the boundaries of established science an avalanche of exotic ideas compete for our attention. Experts tell us that these ideas should not be permitted to take up the time of working scientists, and for the most part they are surely correct. But what about the gems in the rubble pile? By what ground-rules might we bring extraordinary new possibilities to light?

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KickLaBuka
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Interior of the sun, chain of discovery

Post by KickLaBuka » Tue Sep 30, 2008 8:45 am

I think we have the ability to draw the interior of the sun. We can show it is an electric motor and a nuclear reactor. Luminosity (emission, charge density) vs. Field (distance) will be determined, rather than assumed. The planets rotation will be explained knowing that the sun is an electromagnet. The planet's location (radius) will help to determine their mass by including laws of separation of charge as well as those of separation of mass.

Once outside the solar system, we can use our knowledge about fields to do away with "supermassive" black holes, but we already knew that. As scientists took data before, it was altered immediately with factors of Z+1 and other mathematical tools to force emission difference to coinside with expantion. Without it, they see a mess of size and luminosity. We knew that too. At our greatest view, we see larger and dimmer objects, where lots of what we see get smaller as they get dimmer. An electric claim is that lower charge density will have less hold on the path of stars, and the galaxy will get bigger in diameter. Ahah, they say, then why did electricity seice to exist 9 billion years ago? Because we don't know distance yet, so we can't judge time, that's why. Back to the point of understanding the mess, since we will now know distance as a function of luminosity (including mass and charge), we can take observed size (arc angle diameter), observed spectrum (q,m), to determine actual charge density, mass, and actual size. From actual size and arc angle, we can determine actual distance.


It all comes down to drawing the interior of the sun.

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