Feb 26,
2007
A New Theory for the Ring Nebula
New observations of
planetary nebulae have falsified old theories, but
established theoreticians cling to what they knew despite
the availability of more adequate theories.
The Ring Nebula
has long been a favorite object of amateur astronomers and
has been considered the prototypical planetary nebula. Until
recently, the accepted explanation for its appearance, based
on the standard theory of stellar structure and evolution,
has been that typified by this caption to the April 14,
2005, Astronomy Picture of the Day (APOD):
“The appearance
as a ring is really an illusion of projection—the nebula is
actually a spherical shell. At the center a blue dot is
visible which is the old core of the star, known as a white
dwarf. It is still not known exactly how the star throws off
the gas that becomes the nebula.”
The
instrumentation of the space age trampled that idea into
obsolescence. (See “Beyond Dark and Empty” at
http://www.kronia.com/thoth/thoVII01.txt )
Clearer and more detailed images from space telescopes, in
other-than-optical light, and with electronic sensors have
revealed that planetary nebulae have an axial structure that
exhibits
bipolar symmetry. The accepted explanation is now
that typified by this caption to March 22, 2003, APOD:
“This planetary
nebula's simple, graceful appearance is thought to be due to
perspective—our view from planet Earth looking straight into
what is actually a barrel-shaped cloud of gas shrugged off
by a dying central star.”
This time the
caption neglected to say, “It is still not known exactly how
the star throws off the gas that becomes the nebula.” If a
spherical ejection was not “exactly” known, the
barrel-shaped one is even less “exactly” known.
Although the
explanation has changed in response to new observations, the
theory is stuck in the mud of institutional astronomy.
Theoreticians work to find or to create loopholes in the
theory through which they can squeeze the observations
rather than admit the theory has been falsified and create
another, more accurate, theory. This may ensure
job security, but it’s intellectually timid.
Conventional
astronomers are at a loss to know “exactly how the star
throws off the gas” because neither the nebula nor the star
is composed of “gas”. Gas behaves according to the laws of
gas kinetics.
But actually the
star and nebula are composed of
plasma, which behaves according to the laws of
electrical discharges and circuits. The star itself is the
focus of Birkeland currents that make up a circuit flowing
around the galaxy. The electromagnetic “pinch effect” that
squeezes plasma into the star also forms the “ring”—actually
a toroidal (doughnut-shaped)—current around the star’s
equator. The density of the current causes the plasma in the
ring to
glow. The Electric Universe explanation is that
we are looking almost down the axis of an hourglass-shaped
plasma structure.
As the Birkeland
currents expand away from the pinch, the current density
decreases and the glow is less. Modern instruments are
sensitive enough to detect this glow, which reveals the
structure of the currents feeding the ring: a
roughly circular arrangement of bright spots at the ends of
dimmer filaments. (The filaments of current continue away
from the bright spots; but the plasma density is such that
they no longer glow.)
We now know that
the prototypical form of planetary nebulae has changed. In
response, we need to change the theory that explains it.