Are ‘Black Holes’ plasmoids? Absolutely. At least they hit closer to observation.
Picture a central, very heavy mass; let’s call it a pre-black hole. Around that mass is an attracted, violently orbiting accretion disk. It smashes all matter into electrons and protons. At this point you have a plasma. The plasma is in a dynamo effect, inviting organized plasma configurations. At this point we really have only sketchy ideas of what happens next, but it sure isn’t a tame whirlpool of ‘hot gas’ obediently allowing itself to be lured into what gravitational cosmologists believe is a cosmic garbage can.
No sir! Take a quick peek at the solar loops that, with seeming effortlessness suspend what must be billions/trillions of tons of matter high above the photosphere. These loops show no distortion towards the solar gravity that one might expect from a parent body with 28 times the gravity of Earth tugging at these plasma loops; and to think that these are merely temporary passing apparitions, mild examples of the might that the Sun’s electromagnetic plasma configuration must be capable of when compared to its gravitational force.
Momentarily, back to the ‘black holes’; those gracious gravitational mathematical models, eloquently sidestepping the awful messiness of plasma behavior which have a gravitational potential 1 x 10 to the 39th times stronger than gravity in the form of inert matter. Black Holes; pure navelgazing fantasy unbecoming to anyone with even a modicum of scientific integrity.
Now, forgive me for having a go at the electric universe community, but think of it as ‘tough love’. Yes, the phenomenon is very likely a plasmoid, or at least something very closely related to it. I want you now to entertain the idea that these stunningly violent entities are disturbing the very fabric of space; they are inducing gravity without a corresponding quantity of mass.
Can this be proven or disproven in a laboratory? Yes, and through forty years of searching, I have yet to find anyone who has remotely attempted to perform an experiment that could discern this.
Challenge: I propose that, contrary to dogma, a polarized photon passing an electric discharge will minutely deviate its path. For this experiment you need a laser (polarized photons so you can discern their signature), a Z-pinch device (something less powerful might suffice), and an interferometer (the target).
Dogma states that photons are not affected by electromagnetic fields (possibly are, but not at the low level fields we are discussing here).
If the photons deviate, it will have to be the work of gravity; gravitational induction. Gravity without a corresponding quantity of mass.
So I’m suggesting that you electric universe folks are slackers for not even contemplating that this is possible. Yes; this is an electric universe - on steroids!
Best, Stephen Goodfellow
An Electric Universe - on Steroids!
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