Merged Electric Sun Theory (Split from: CME's, active regions and high energy flares)

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FYI, here was Peratt's *definition*

That's not the quote we were discussing.

Do try to keep up.

Now of course know for a fact from lab experiments that "electrical discharges':

I'm fascinated to learn about these lab experiments of yours demonstrating an electrical discharge forming an extended arc from one point of a conductor to another point on the same conductor, rather than simply having the current flow along the much shorter path through the conductor itself.

How many puzzle pieces have to fit together before you accept reality anyway?

... asked the man who believes in a thermodynamically impossible solid shell underneath the photosphere which would collapse under its own weight but magically doesn't because he saw a video of a water bubble.

I'm wondering when you're going to realize your pieces DON'T fit.
 
That's not the quote we were discussing.

Do try to keep up.

We're discussing solar flares and whether they involve "electrical discharges" in plasma. Keep up. :)

I'm fascinated to learn about these lab experiments of yours demonstrating an electrical discharge forming an extended arc from one point of a conductor to another point on the same conductor, rather than simply having the current flow along the much shorter path through the conductor itself.

Really? Here's what it looks like in a real lab experiment with real control mechanisms and oh ya, "electrical discharges". :)

birkelandyohkohmini.jpg


The black and white image from Birkeland is over 100 years old now. How could you possibly not know of it's existence?
 
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Really? Here's what it looks like in a real lab experiment with real control mechanisms and oh ya, "electrical discharges". :)

Funny thing: the picture doesn't actually indicate that the current loops from one part of the sphere to another.

[qimg]http://www.thesurfaceofthesun.com/images/birkelandyohkohmini.jpg[/qimg]

The black and white image from Birkeland is over 100 years old now. How could you possibly not know of it's existence?

Argument by pretty picture! Let's play!


Don't like that one? How about this?

 
Funny thing: the picture doesn't actually indicate that the current loops from one part of the sphere to another.

You're right actually. You'd have to read the accompanied text and maths to understand *WHY* they do that. :)

Argument by pretty picture! Let's play!

No, pretty pictures are just harder to deny and most of you won't bother reading the pretty maths.

Note that discharges are *KNOWN* to "cause" the things we "observe' in flare events. Deny it all you like, but the evidence is all very well documented and tested, right here on Earth.
 
You're right actually. You'd have to read the accompanied text and maths to understand *WHY* they do that. :)

You haven't even demonstrated THAT they do that.

No, pretty pictures are just harder to deny and most of you won't bother reading the pretty maths.

That's rich, you trying to pretend I'm not doing the math. Who exactly do you think is going to believe that accusation?

So are you going to deny the reality of the pictures I posted? Clearly, the sun is a death star, and Birkeland invented UFO's.
 
We're discussing solar flares and whether they involve "electrical discharges" in plasma. Keep up. :)



Really? Here's what it looks like in a real lab experiment with real control mechanisms and oh ya, "electrical discharges". :)

[qimg]http://www.thesurfaceofthesun.com/images/birkelandyohkohmini.jpg[/qimg]

The black and white image from Birkeland is over 100 years old now. How could you possibly not know of it's existence?


Using Birkeland's picture of an experiment concerning Saturn to support a cockamamie claim about the Sun is a flat out lie. A lie. There is no other word to use to describe it. It's a lie, and anyone who would use that lie to support a crazy conjecture is a liar.
 
Using Birkeland's picture of an experiment concerning Saturn to support a cockamamie claim about the Sun is a flat out lie. A lie. There is no other word to use to describe it. It's a lie, and anyone who would use that lie to support a crazy conjecture is a liar.

http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=6711945&postcount=1198

Do you ever intend to answer my direct question, or did you intend to attempt to dodge it every single day (because you know I'm going to keep asking you) forever and ever?
 
Do you ever intend to answer my direct question, or did you intend to attempt to dodge it every single day (because you know I'm going to keep asking you) forever and ever?

No you won't. You might do it for a while, maybe even a few weeks. But you'll get bored of it eventually, just like people have gotten bored of asking you questions you won't answer.
 
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=6711945&postcount=1198

Do you ever intend to answer my direct question, or did you intend to attempt to dodge it every single day (because you know I'm going to keep asking you) forever and ever?


I can't think of a rational reason I should be drawn into a dishonest attempt to place the burden of proof for some inane claim upon me... especially when portions of the crackpot arguments offered so far are demonstrably flat out lies. I didn't make the claim that a solar flare is an electrical discharge. It's not my job to support it.

And here we are, just over 1200 posts into this thread, and still not a speck of quantitative objective support for that wacky electric Sun conjecture. Lies, unsupported assertions, guesses, arguments from incredulity, arguments from ignorance, and a variety of other logical fallacies, but not one single piece of quantitative objective evidence. Not in this thread. And not in over half a decade of crackpots trolling the Internet with these same silly claims. It seems pretty certain if any legitimate evidence exists it would have been presented by now.
 
I can't think of a rational reason I should be drawn into a dishonest attempt to place the burden of proof for some inane claim upon me...

http://jpsj.ipap.jp/link?JPSJ/33/496/

I am not doing that. I am asking you to rescind an obviously false (lie) statement based on evidence presented. Are you *EVER* going to recant, and do you really think you have any credibility left at this point in time?
 
That argument is a lie.

Bull. Here is *YOUR* claim of *KNOWLEDGE* about the nature of flares:

There is no electrical discharge processes involved in solar filament eruptions and CMEs.

Your statement. Your burden of proof. I have already provided you with evidence to demonstrate that *YOUR* claim is false. The longer you refuse to retract your false statement, and continue to deny the evidence presented, the longer you simply demonstrate the pathological (denial based) nature of your false statements.
 
Bull. Here is *YOUR* claim of *KNOWLEDGE* about the nature of flares:



Your statement. Your burden of proof. I have already provided you with evidence to demonstrate that *YOUR* claim is false. The longer you refuse to retract your false statement, and continue to deny the evidence presented, the longer you simply demonstrate the pathological (denial based) nature of your false statements.


That particular dishonest rant was thoroughly addressed many times, for example in post #406 on December 7. If this is too complicated I can try to make it simpler...

Argument by badgering and dishonestly attempting to deflect the burden of proof is noted. The claim, the subject of this thread, is that electrical discharges are or cause CMEs and solar flares. Until and unless that claim is objectively and scientifically supported, the reasonable default position to take is that it is not true. Since the crackpot claim has not been objectively, quantitatively, and scientifically supported, not even remotely, most of us here obviously take the default position. It is not a claim. It is simply where we start. And it is where we are bound to stay if the electric Sun cranks can't support their claim.

Again, the responsibility for supporting a claim falls to the claimant. The default position, in lieu of the claim being objectively supported, is that it is not true.

The responsibility for supporting a claim, this claim...

For the record, I said that a solar flare *IS* an electrical discharge.


... falls to the claimant. The default position, given that silly claim hasn't been objectively supported, is that it is not true. And that simple lesson in basic scientific concepts is part of what puts the "E" in JREF. Simple grade school stuff. We shouldn't have to go through it again.

So where were we? Oh, yes. Apparently everything the electric Sun proponents have to offer has been provided. If there's nothing else, I think we can all agree the claim that a solar flare is an electrical discharge is unsupported and likely unsupportable. But if there is any quantitative objective support, this would be a fine time to bring it in.
 
I'm sorry, maybe I confused you by highlighting too much of Dungey's text the first time. Let me try again for you:



Ok, explain *ONLY* the yellow parts for us now GM and explain in detail what you think he means by the parts in yellow.

Like I said before, this Dungey paper is a reply to a comment,
You cannot truly underdstand what Dungey wants to say if you don't have the original paper.

Does anyone have access to the original Dungey paper???
 
Ok. At least you and I can now communicate.



Ooops? What happened there? Are you trying to 'fit in' with the 'guys', even the ones that haven't bothered to read the materials in question, and therefore haven't a clue what they are even talking about?

How exactly did you expect us to have a "conversation" if we can't agree on "terms"? Surely you aren't so ignorant as to believe that a "discharge" cannot happen in a plasma because it is a "conductor"?

I don't need to fit in anywhere, I am just fine where I am, a reasonably well established space physicist with about 100 publications and an h-factor of 19.

I think it is pretty clear what I mean. You want to pin down Peratt by his one sentence (the rapid transfer of E or B energy), but that is not the whole quote. Peratt continues to add to that, about a break down of the medium, when certain stresses are exceeded.

For that I see no evidence in MRx. What I see there (in simple view) is oppositely directed magnetic field being brought together, with a current sheet in between (as necessitated by Maxwell) with in the centre zero magnetic field. (all this is well measured and documented by the Cluster mission, see the Runov et al. paper).

So there is first anti-parallel field (only two regions, field pointed to the left, field pointed to the right), then when MRx sets on, there are four regions (field pointed to the left, field pointed to the right, and then added field looping from left to right and at the other side field looping from right to left, the well established X-line model).

Even though there is conversion from magnetic energy to particle energy I cannot, for the love of 2011, consider this a discharge, as the particle accelertation is done by release of magnetic tension of the looped field and the particles that are connected to the magnetic field.

But please, you can give a full explanation of the Runov et al. observations, and then show me where I am wrong in my conclusion.
 
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Really? Here's what it looks like in a real lab experiment with real control mechanisms and oh ya, "electrical discharges". :)

[qimg]http://www.thesurfaceofthesun.com/images/birkelandyohkohmini.jpg[/qimg]

The black and white image from Birkeland is over 100 years old now. How could you possibly not know of it's existence?

I have given my interpretation of the left figure in the Birkeland thread in post #10. Unfortunately, I see that part of my text was shifted inside the quote marks that showed Birkeland's text (I cannot edit it anymore) but here is what I wrote there:

me said:
What I think is happening is that there is, indeed, a discharge between the cathode ball and the anode box. With the strong magnitization of the ball, the electrons will follow the magnetic lines of force, and they excite the "dense" gas, making it glow and at the "tips" of the luminiscent rings, the electrons are uncoupled and go to the anode, which is not visible in the pictures that Birkeland took.

Which makes a lot more sense than having a discharge from the Terrella to the Terrella, as the Terrella is at one potential.
 
Like I said before, this Dungey paper is a reply to a comment,
You cannot truly underdstand what Dungey wants to say if you don't have the original paper.
I'm sure you're right, but I think we can arrive at a partial understanding by reading other papers by Dungey and by other authors who cite Dungey's 1953 paper, as you have done.

Having done some of that myself, I decided it would be a useful exercise for me to verify what appears to be the primary claim of Dungey's 1953 paper ("Neutral points are found to be unstable...") via numerical simulation, and to derive all of the formulas needed for that simulation directly from Maxwell's equations.

After all, my primary goal here is to brush up on freshman physics and calculus. I have no illusions about convincing any of the folks who believe myth is a more reliable source of data than astrophysics. (That's no joke, and I'm thinking of you, Haig.)

Does anyone have access to the original Dungey paper???
I don't have it. It isn't available online, so there's no point to registering at the Philosophical Magazine site as I did. I could go to my university librarian, but I don't see why I should put the university to any trouble just to satisfy some ***** who denies the relevance of magnetic reconnection to Dungey's work.

Here's the full citation and abstract:
J W Dungey. Conditions for the occurrence of electrical discharges in astrophysical systems. Philosophical Magazine Series 7 volume 44, issue 354, 1953, pages 725-738.
Dungey said:
Abstract
Discharges are shown to be a possible source of high energy particles, if the current density is very large. The growth of the current density is discussed using the fact that the magnetic lines of force are approximately frozen into the ionized gas. It is shown that discharges are unlikely to occur anywhere except at neutral points of the magnetic field. Neutral points are found to be unstable in such a way that a small perturbation will start a discharge in a time of the order of the characteristic time of the system. Such discharges may account for aurorae, and may also occur in solar flares and the interstellar gas.
 
Electric Sun & Solar Neutrinos II

Haig has given us a very long post (#1168 in this thread) which is as usual filled with cut & paste, in which he expresses great confidence, but is in fact mostly wrong. I can't deal with so much in any realistic fashion; after all, it is so much easier to cut & paste without thought than it is to explain why the material presented is in fact just plain wrong. Here I will deal with the neutrino data.

and falsify interpretation of neutrino observations that support the high core temperature. This will be harder done than said, because all of the theory & observations I have mentioned here are rooted in very fundamental physics.
Clearly, although the fusion model is beloved by its advocates, an objective analysis of the Sudbury and MiniBooNE experiments reveal that the missing neutrino problem still remains very far from being solved. And unless it is, the fusion model stands completely falsified. Don Scott
http://www.electric-cosmos.org/sudbury.htm
Nice try, but Don Scott is not just wrong, but actually backwards. In fact the MiniBooNE experiments are consistent with, and therefore confirmatory of the other neutrino experiments, not in contradiction to them as claimed here. But explaining all this requires that the whole story be told in some detail and I will set out to do that here.

Reference my own earlier posts Electric Sun & Nuclear Fusion I & Electric Sun & Nuclear Fusion II and in particular my own webpage Solar Fusion and Neutrinos for background information, especially regarding neutrino physics, and publications that I do not reference here.

There are three types of neutrinos: electron, muon and tauon along with three matching anti-neutrinos. Nuclear reactions inside the Sun produce only electron neutrinos. The early experiments designed to detect solar neutrinos were sensitive only to electron neutrinos and they counted too few neutrinos to be consistent with expectations of any physically reasonable solar model. Later experiments designed to be sensitive to all 3 types of neutrinos detected a sum total over all 3 types that is equal to the total number of electron neutrinos expected from the Sun (within the limits of experimental uncertainty, a fact which I will not repeat but is obviously a necessary consequence of any experiment). These observations are consistent with the previously established theory of neutrino oscillation, which tells us that neutrinos in the presence of a mass density can "oscillate" from one type into another. In the case of solar neutrinos, the oscillation is from the electron type into either muon or tauon type. Furthermore, the observation of a day-night asymmetry in the solar neutrino observations is consistent with the motion of the Sun (confirming that they are indeed solar in origin), and consistent with the theory of neutrino oscillation through the mass density of the Earth. Note that this is a completely mutually consistent collection of theory and observational data, in particular confirmatory of the oscillation of solar electron neutrinos into muon or tauon neutrinos.

Meanwhile, data from the Liquid Scintillating Neutrino Detector (LSND) seem to show oscillation of tauon anti-neutrinos into electron anti-neutrinos (Aguilar, et al., 2001). In this paper it is clearly stated that ... "it is difficult to explain the solar neutrino deficit, the atmospheric neutrino anomaly, and the LSND excess of events with only three flavors of neutrinos, so that a fourth, sterile neutrino has been proposed to explain all the data." This statement underlines a very important point: Experimental data have to be interpreted in the context of theoretical expectations. If we stick to our standard 3 neutrino types, then there is a problem making all of the data mutually consistent. However, if we modify the theory (e.g., add a fourth type of neutrino) then all of the data can become mutually consistent.

Scott & Haig are both telling us that the MiniBooNE data are absolutely inconsistent with the Sudbury data, ignoring the obvious fact that this claim depends explicitly on theoretical context. Add a fourth type of neutrino to your theory, and in fact the inconsistency vanishes. Of course, they also ignored the fact that LSND experiment studies the oscillation of tauon anti-neutrinos into electron anti-neutrinos, while the Sudbury experiment deals exclusively with the oscillation of electron neutrinos into tauon and/or muon neutrinos. There is no overlap in the data type between these experiments. Since they share no commonality in data, then they can be compared with each other only in the context of some theory. So once again, the Scott & Haig claim requires a theoretical context to make any sense at all, and they do not present any such theory, therefore their claims are devoid of value.

The MiniBooNE experiment was designed specifically to test the LSND claim. The initial results, those to which Scott & Haig refer, appear in Laha & Vempati, 2007 and in Tanaka, et al.., 2007. The MiniBooNE experiment tests for oscillations of muon anti-neutrinos into electron anti-neutrinos. Note that LSND studies the different path of tauon anti-neutrinos into electron anti-neutrinos, so once again a theoretical context is required to compare the data between LSND & MiniBooNE, since they share no common data type. In particular, see the MiniBooNE publications page and scroll down to the PhD theses by Monroe (2007) and Aguilar-Arevalo (2008) which will supply all of the gory details you will need. These initial MiniBooNE data do not show any sign of oscillations of muon anti-neutrinos into electron anti-neutrinos.

The Scott/Haig approach to interpreting what has happened thus far is weak at best. They claim that the conflict between these experiments (which deal exclusively with anti-neutrinos) is a critical blow to any claim that neutrinos actually oscillate. But what we actually have is a large collection of experiments which show positive signs for neutrino oscillations and one experiment that does not. Does common sense support the idea that this one experiment must overrule and falsify all of the other experiments, even though they do not even share a common data type? I don't think so. Remember my comments above about sterile neutrinos and theoretical context.

In reality, the situation was/is rather more confused than Scott or Haig realize. Maltoni & Schwetz, 2007 analyze the MiniBooNE & LSND data, along with other reactor neutrino oscillation experiments and come up with some interesting findings. First, if the MiniBooNE & LSND data are ignored, then all other neutrino oscillation experiments are easily compatible with the standard 3 types of neutrinos. Adding 1 or 3 extra "sterile" neutrinos to the theoretical mix does not help to make MiniBooNE & LSND more compatible and may even make things worse. However, by adding 2 extra "sterile" neutrinos to the theoretical mix the MiniBooNE & LSND data now mesh together quite nicely and are not incompatible, but it does cause some internal tension with the MiniBooNE data set. This just serves to emphasize the role of theoretical context in deciding how to interpret experimental data. This also shows us that sometimes we can't reach definitive conclusions in science. Sometimes we are stuck with conflicts between data sets, and that's where we sand here, with a conflict that needs to be addressed. Scott's way of resolving the conflict is to assume that his preconception is correct, while more objective scientists try to resolve the conflict by examining every aspect of both theory and experiment and letting logic and data lead the way rather than preconception. That is what wed do here, and we will be rewarded with some success for this effort.

The final chapter of my neutrino story comes in the form of a press release from Fermi National Laboratory dated 18 June 2010: MiniBooNE results suggest antineutrinos act differently. The old standard theory of neutrinos assumed that they had no rest mass, but neutrino oscillation requires that neutrinos have a rest mass, so that part of the theory has been modified, and much of the neutrino oscillation research ongoing today is intended to seek out the proper neutrino rest mass. But theory continued to hold that neutrinos and anti-neutrinos oscillated in the same manner. However, the latest MiniBooNE results imply that this is not the case, that the theory is in error and anti-neutrinos oscillate differently than do neutrinos. This is a very important result. Says the press release: "Earlier this week, after nearly three years of running in antineutrino mode, MiniBooNE collaborators announced that they had obtained a result consistent with the findings from LSND. In fact, analyzing the data in the context of a standard two neutrino mixing model favors an LSND-like signal at a 99.4 percent confidence level." These results are presented in the paper Aguilar-Arevalo, et al., 2010 which has been published in Physical Review Letters. This paper also reviews the history of the relationship between LSND and MiniBooNE data.

Scott's criticism, cut & pasted by Haig was based on initial results from MiniBooNE, misinterpreted by Scott to mean that there was no sign of neutrino oscillation. However, the correct interpretation is that there was (and still is) no sign of anti-neutrino oscillation in the theoretically expected energy range. But the current MiniBooNE data does show anti-neutrino oscillation at lower energies, which are consistent with the LSND data, which also showed anti-neutrino oscillation at lower energies. So the LSND and MiniBooNE data are mutually consistent, replacing the assumption of new neutrino types with the assumption that anti-neutrinos oscillate differently from neutrinos (the latter assumption being better supported by the data).

The Bottom Line
Haig supports Scott's claim that the MiniBooNE data implying no neutrino oscillations casts serious doubt on LSND data that does show evidence of neutrino oscillation. But that claim of Scott's was never reasonable in the first place, since it ignored all of the solar neutrino data and ignored the potentially serious difference between the oscillation of neutrinos and anti-neutrinos. We now know that the latest MiniBooNE data, as of July 2010, do in fact show anti-neutrino oscillation and are in fact consistent with, and not contrary to, the LSND anti-neutrino oscillation data. Therefore an objective analysis concludes that the Haig/Scott claim stands falsified.

This is a necessarily complicated story laced with neutrino physics jargon that is hard to get around and I hope I have managed to tell the story in a comprehensible fashion. In any case, it is important to always understand that science is a moving target. Scott saw a result he liked, and simply stuck with it. But while Scott stood still, frozen by prejudice, science moved on, and the result in which he placed so much confidence was in fact negated and reversed by later data. Scott's failure to research his own claim has nothing to do with a lack of funding or support; it took me an hour or two to do all the research to write this post (which took much longer than the research), using public archives, in a field of physics about which I know very little. Scott is supposed to be a professional, but he does not act like a professional and makes too many simplistic and lazy mistakes to be considered trustworthy.

As of now, the solar neutrino data stand without any serious criticism by anyone, and therefore the theory that the Sun is powered by internal nuclear fusion reactions also stands without any valid scientific opposition.
 
Why Sunspots Are Cool II

I continue here in response to Haig's long post #1168 in this thread. Here I will address the issue of sunspots.

So, for the record, how do you explain this: ... Sunspots are dark instead of bright, which is prima facie evidence that heat is not trying to escape from within.

No. The fact that sunspots are "dark" is not prima facie evidence that heat is not trying to escape from within. To begin with, sunspots are not dark; rather, they are relatively dark, compared to the surrounding solar photosphere. The general photosphere of the Sun (this is what we would call the "surface" of the Sun as seen from Earth) has a temperature of about 5800 Kelvins (K; 9980 degrees Fahrenheit, or F), sunspot temperatures are in the range 3000 to 4000 K (4900 - 6700 F). If you had something sitting in front of you at the same temperature as a sunspot it would appear to glow "white hot", meaning it would appear to your eyes to be white in color, not dark. The logical interpretation of the difference in brightness & color of sunspots compared to the rest of the visible Sun is that the sunspot is cooler. The temperatures I give here are the result of observational data that confirm the logical interpretation.

So a correct restatement of Haig's point above would look something like this:
Sunspots are relatively dark, which is prima facie evidence that less heat escapes from sunspots than escapes from the surrounding photosphere.

A simple, heuristic way to think about sunspots is that they are "bubbles of magnetism" with solar plasma trapped inside. This is not a technically correct description, but it is a good enough approximation for this discussion. The trapped plasma inside the sunspot radiates heat, just like the rest of the Sun does. In the photosphere outside of a sunspot, as heat is radiated away into space, new heat flows up from below in the form of upward convecting gas. The result is an average thermal equilibrium in the photosphere, meaning that the amount of heat convecting up from below is equal to the amount of heat radiating out into space. However, the magnetic field around a sunspot inhibits convection into the sunspot, so not as much heat can get in from below as is the case outside the magnetically protected region. The result is that inside the sunspot, the equilibrium temperature is lower than it is outside the sunspot. Heat still escapes from within, just less of it.

At this point a refer the reader to a couple of my earlier posts: Photosphere, Sunspots, Helioseismology (8 April 2010); Why Sunspots Are Cool (17 July 2009), where a slightly more detailed description of the physics will be found, with reference to the appropriate scientific text.

Now another point regarding Haig's statement, "prima facie evidence that heat is not trying to escape from within". I get the impression that this is supposed to be a general critique of the idea that the Sun has any internal heat source at all. So one must ask the obvious question: What about all that bright Sun outside of sunspots? Is that not prima facie evidence that heat is trying to escape from within? We know from observation that the radiation from the photosphere is a good approximation of a thermal background with the photospheric absorption spectrum superimposed on it, which is exactly what we should & would see if heat were flowing through the photosphere from below. We can observe the photosphere in depth at the solar limb, and I have discussed this before too; e.g., Solid Surface and Photosphere (7 July 2009); Optical Depth (6 July 2009); Photosphere Temperature Profile (26 June 2009; also see supporting post Atmospheric Profile Inversion Techniques 27 June 2009).

Here is a sample YouTube video Solar Convection Currents that shows what certainly appears to be gas welling up from below in convection cells, cooling, and then falling back down in the dark lanes between bright cells, and shows the convection surrounding a sunspot. This is just one example, but there are plenty more videos like this one. Furthermore, there are copious Doppler maps made of the Sun every day by solar observatories all over the world, which monitor the convective motion (see, for instance, the 150 foot Solar Tower Telescope at Mt. Wilson Observatory and see their daily Dopplergram images).

All of these data clearly indicate a flow of heat from an internal source, welling up through the photosphere from bottom to top. The sunspot argument made here is ineffective in counteracting this extensive library of observational data. So, as is the case for solar neutrinos, there remains no valid scientific argument contrary to the standard conclusion that the source of the Sun's driving energy is entirely internal to the Sun. Furthermore, the strongly confirmed neutrino evidence drives the conclusion that the internal heat source is a network of nuclear fusion reactions.
 
Electric Sun and Coronal Heating II

I continue here in response to Haig's long post #1168 in this thread. Here I will address the issue of the temperature of the solar corona.

So, for the record, how do you explain this: ... the Sun’s corona is millions of degrees hotter than the photosphere. These simple observations point to the energy source of the Sun being external.

I take it that "these simple observations", in plural, is meant to include both solar neutrinos & sunspots, along with the corona. I have already demonstrated in my previous posts that the criticisms from Haig, based both on neutrinos and sunspots, are wrong and therefore ineffective.

As for coronal heating, Haig already raised this same issue and I already answered. See my post Electric Sun and Coronal Heating I (20 December 2010).
The standard model does not so cavalierly dismiss the obvious magnetic field, but rather takes advantage of it. The acceleration is magnetic and not electrostatic in origin (magnetic fields are observed in great detail, while electrostatic fields are by observation far less ubiquitous; one must remember Faradays Law and the Maxwell Faraday equation, which show that a time variable magnetic field creates an electric field). A combination of magnetic and acoustic energy is quite capable of explaining the heating of the corona. While all the details are not known and many questions remain, the basic idea is well within the realm of standard physics. See, for instance, the book Solar Astrophysics by Peter Foukal (Wiley-VCH, 2004), chapter 9 "The Chromosphere and Corona"; the books Stellar Magnetism by Leon Mestel (Oxford University Press 1999 & 2003) and Magnetic Reconnection: MHD Theory and Practice by Priest & Forbes (Cambridge University Press 2000), both of which have chapters on coronal heating. Or see papers such as De Pontieu, et al., 2009; Cranmer, 2008; Cranmer, van Ballegooijen & Edgar, 2007; Schrijver, et al., 2004; Walsh & Ireland, 2003 and Schrijver, et al., 1997 with references therein & citations thereto.

So what we have is you linking to a website that promotes a seriously flawed model of its own while falsely criticizing the standard model. And the mistakes made are not subtle mistakes that even an expert might make, but big fat mistakes like ignoring the magnetic field altogether or assuming that there is some connection between nuclear fusion in the core and the heating of the corona. You need to do better than that.

From 25 September 2010:
The standard solar model, on the other hand, can explain this temperature gradient fairly easily, at least in principle. It is due to magnetic or magneto acoustic waves, which steepen into shocks at the transition region. That's an oversimplification but it gets the idea across. Most of the chromospheric heating, in the 1,000 km below the transition region, can be explained by compressional waves associated with the 5-minute oscillations in photospheric granules (it is far easier for things that move around to generate waves than it is for a static iron layer to do it). Coronal heating is probably due to several simultaneous processes happening at once, including magnetic Alfven waves, and energy released by microflares & spicules at the top of the chromosphere. This is all extensively reviewed in the literature, though usually dismissed without comment by critics of the standard model, who usually prefer to avoid physics whenever possible; see for instance, my earlier post Coronal Heating & Solar Wind I (17 April 2010) and references therein.


from 14 September 2010:
1 "The coronal heating anomaly where the inverse square law of radiation is explicity violated is dually thermodynamically impossible if using the standard solar model." That statement is factually false, there is no inverse square law violation of radiation. Evidently Zeuzzz does not understand the difference between radiant energy and particle kinetic energy, which is a pretty severe mistake for somebody who claims some expertise in physics. The kinetic temperature of the particles that make up the solar corona is on the order of 1,000,000 Kelvins, whereas the kinetic temperature of the particles that make up the solar photosphere, which lies below the corona, is roughly 5800 Kelvins. Since the spontaneous flow of heat energy is in all cases from higher temperature to lower temperature, and never the other way around (second law of thermodynamics), one might naively assume that this is an example a well established law of physics being violated. This is the "anomaly" to which Zeuzzz refers, and it has nothing at all to do with the inverse square law for radiation. It is also not an "anomaly" of any kind, although some who style themselves as alternative thinkers, but are actually rather careless thinkers, would like you to believe it is.

A moment of non-careless thinking will quickly reveal that a refrigerator prominently displays the transfer of heat from lower temperature regions inside the refrigerator to the higher temperature regions outside the refrigerator, in obvious violation of the fabled second law. Yet nobody seems upset about that, so what's the deal with these physics violating refrigerator things? The deal is that in a refrigerator, the transfer of heat is not spontaneous. I draw your attention to the critical presence of the word "not". Left to its own devices, water will always flow downhill, but we all know that it can be pumped uphill. Likewise, heat energy can be pumped "uphill", in the direction cold -> hot, as opposed to the natural direction hot -> cold. A refrigerator is simply a heat pump, which does work and expends energy and results in the pumping of heat "uphill". All one needs is a pumping mechanism and the "anomaly" of the corona becomes an interesting problem in physics, but violates no law of physics. So Zeuzzz is wrong on both counts: There is no "anomaly" at all, unless Zeuzzz is prepared to prove from first principles that any and all pumping mechanisms are impossible in this physical context, and since radiation is not involved, there is clearly no violation of the inverse square law for the decrease in radiation intensity.

And this leads us into the next topic ...

2 "Still no theory has been backed up by adequate data to explain coronal heating, and coronal acceleration for that matter." Not only is that statement factually incorrect, it is the exact opposite of the truth. There are in fact so many viable pumping mechanisms to choose from that the real scientific debate centers on which mechanisms are responsible for what fraction of the pumping, and whether or not there are still more pumping mechanisms that we have yet to elucidate. This is easy to determine with a cursory glance at the scientific literature. We should expect someone who claims knowledge & expertise in any field of science to at least have a minimal grasp of the published literature in that field.

These are all points I have made before: Coronal Heating & Solar Wind I (17 April 2010). This matter of the alleged impossibility of the solar corona temperature compared to the photospheric temperature has never yet been properly addressed by those who have alternative models for solar physics. I just thought I would drop by and remind you all of this fact.

From 13 February 2009:
Neither is there any fundamental problem with the 2nd law of thermodynamics, since the energy involved on the temperature of the corona is on the order of 1% of the total energy available to heat the corona. The problem is one of identifying which of several possible mechanisms available to heat the corona are actually most effective.

The photosphere has a low temperature compared to the corona, but a much higher mass density and therefore a much higher energy density than the corona (remember that temperature is just the kinetic energy of the particles). So that fact that the energy in the photosphere is more than 100 times the energy needed to heat the corona is half of what you need to know to realize that there is no fundamental problem. The other half is the simple realization that non-thermal electromagnetic processes are abundant in the transition region between the chromosphere and corona. Those processes are easily enough to get the job of heating the corona done.

From 24 February 2009:
Ok, we're working here on "cause". Something has to generate a lot of heat in the corona. So how exactly does the plasma reach those temps sitting above a 6000K photosphere?
How, exactly, nobody knows. However, the problem is not that there are no explanations available, but rather how to choose between the likely candidates. Cranmer, 2008 gives a nice review of the general choice between wave dissipation and magnetic loop reconnection, and has a lot of useful references in it. We know that there is a clear correlation between small scale magnetic structure and coronal structure at much higher altitudes (see, for instance, chapter 9 in Solar Astrophysics by Peter V. Foukal; Wiley-VCH, 2004). Schrijver, et al., 1997 was a big deal when it came out (and has 185 citations so far, a respectable number). They were able to make models based on the high resolution images of the sun's "magnetic carpet" (Title & Schrijver, 1998) and show that the loss of energy from the shearing magnetic structures can drive coronal heating, at least in principle. One also sees the keyword "nanoflares" associated with this idea (i.e., Hudson, 1991; Kopp & Poletto, 1993 & citations thereto & etc.).

There is no fundamental problem having a multi-million degree corona sitting on a 6000 degree photosphere, although it may look that way if your approach is too naive. The 2nd law of thermodynamics does not stop refrigerators from working, because they pump heat "uphill" by doing work. likewise, magnetic processes can pump energy "uphill" and heat the corona. The only real problem to watch out for is to make sure the photospheric energy reservoir is up to the task. Since we know that it is, then there is no problem.

From 23 March 2009:
Here is the paper from Science:
Alfven Waves in the Lower Solar Atmosphere
D.B Jess, et al.; Science, 20 March 2009
Abstract:
We report the detection of oscillatory phenomena associated with a large bright-point group that is 430,000 square kilometers in area and located near the solar disk center. Wavelet analysis reveals full-width half-maximum oscillations with periodicities ranging from 126 to 700 seconds originating above the bright point and significance levels exceeding 99%. These oscillations, 2.6 kilometers per second in amplitude, are coupled with chromospheric line-of-sight Doppler velocities with an average blue shift of 23 kilometers per second. A lack of cospatial intensity oscillations and transversal displacements rules out the presence of magneto-acoustic wave modes. The oscillations are a signature of Alfven waves produced by a torsional twist of +/-22 degrees. A phase shift of 180 degrees across the diameter of the bright point suggests that these torsional Alfven oscillations are induced globally throughout the entire brightening. The energy flux associated with this wave mode is sufficient to heat the solar corona.

This paper reports the detection of Alfven waves propagating from the photosphere to the chromosphere of the sun. De Pontieu, et al., 2007 report the detection of Alfven waves in the solar chromosphere. Like Jess, et al., above, they too assert that the energy of the waves is sufficient to heat the solar corona. Tomczyk, et al., 2007 report the detection of Alfven waves in the solar corona. However, other authors have said that these observations are inconsistent with the expectations of MHD theory, and Jess et al. suggest that they are better interpreted not as pure Alfven waves, but mixed magneto-acoustic waves. This would make the report here in Jess, at al. the first unambiguous detection of Alfven waves (which are pure magnetic waves) in the solar atmosphere.

Whether or not they are pure Alfven waves, or magneto-acoustic waves, I think it is significant that the authors claim sufficient energy to heat the solar corona. It has long been anticipated that one of the two is the major mechanism for heating the corona. I also note that Patsourakos & Klimchuk, 2009 (which appeared today; Astrophysical Journal, in press) report spectroscopic evidence that the heating of the corona is impulsive, which they attribute to "nano-flares". But "nano-flares" are probably the source of the brightening seen by Jess, et al. at the footpoints of their Alfven waves. So maybe we are seeing nano-flares launch Alfven waves and/or magneto-acoustic waves to heat the corona.

As you can see, the high temperature of the corona has been fodder for the electric star crowd for a long time. The standard model handles the problem easily. The corona is heated by non-thermal processes, of which there are too many candidates available. It's not that there is no way to explain the high temperature of the corona, but rather that there are too many possible ways to heat the corona, so we still have to figure out which of the possible ways to do it work best.

So as it stands, the critiques based on neutrinos, sunspots, and the hot corona are all rendered ineffective. Furthermore, the electric sun crowd have produced no physically viable explanation of their own for any of these phenomena. That puts the standard model way ahead in the game.
 
Electric Sun & the Solar Wind I

I continue here in response to Haig's long post #1168 (dated 29 December 2010) in this thread. Here I will address a question he raised concerning the solar wind.

* I am indebted to Professor Don Scott for this insight. He points out that the complete shutdown of the solar wind for two days in May 1999 is understandable with his transistor model. It is inexplicable on the thermonuclear model since there was no change in the Sun''s visible energy output that accompanied the phenomenon.
Note that despite the use of the first person here, "I" does not refer to Haig, who blindly cut & pasted this paragraph from a Thornhill webpage so that it looks like Haig referring to himself, but the "I" here is actually Thornhill.

Haig already asked about this only 10 days previously, on 19 December 2010:
Why was there a complete shutdown of the solar wind for two days in May 1999?
And I answered the next day:
The solar wind did not shut down at any time. Rather, the Earth was surrounded by a low density plasma cloud (see Vats, et al., 2001). Outside the low density region around the Earth, the solar wind was apparently in its normal state. Ordinary variations in the solar wind are caused by the fact that the solar wind is emitted by the extremely variable environment of the chromosphere/corona, so it comes as no surprise that the solar wind will be as variable as the environment wherein it is spawned.
How soon we forget. Only 9 days later and Haig has already forgotten that this falsehood was already dealt with. I guess that's the depth of carelessness which we can expect.
 
How soon we forget. Only 9 days later and Haig has already forgotten that this falsehood was already dealt with. I guess that's the depth of carelessness which we can expect.

It's just selective memory, whatever does not fit in Haig's preconceptions (and here I thought at the beginning that he was a different kind of EU admirer, more open, boy was I mistaken!) does not stick in his brain, it goes in one ear and out the other, or in case of this bulletin board I should say in one eye and out the other.
 
I continue here in response to Haig's long post #1168 (dated 29 December 2010) in this thread. Here I will address a question he raised concerning the solar wind.

Note that despite the use of the first person here, "I" does not refer to Haig, who blindly cut & pasted this paragraph from a Thornhill webpage so that it looks like Haig referring to himself, but the "I" here is actually Thornhill.

Haig already asked about this only 10 days previously, on 19 December 2010:

And I answered the next day:

How soon we forget. Only 9 days later and Haig has already forgotten that this falsehood was already dealt with. I guess that's the depth of carelessness which we can expect.

It's just selective memory, whatever does not fit in Haig's preconceptions (and here I thought at the beginning that he was a different kind of EU admirer, more open, boy was I mistaken!) does not stick in his brain, it goes in one ear and out the other, or in case of this bulletin board I should say in one eye and out the other.
If you read again what I posted you will notice Wal Thornhill at the end not Haig ;)

I don't always have time to put things in quotes but the name at the end is a clue as to whose words they are. Here let me copy and paste it again:

Here is another:The Bottom Line

Our Sun, like all stars, is a variable star. We must learn to live with the uncertainty of a star that is a product of its environment. We can expect our Sun to change when it enters regions of interstellar space where there is more or less dust, which alters the plasma characteristics. In the meantime, we can only look for reassurance by closely examining the behavior of nearby stars. A few massive CME's are the least of our concerns.

* I am indebted to Professor Don Scott for this insight. He points out that the complete shutdown of the solar wind for two days in May 1999 is understandable with his transistor model. It is inexplicable on the thermonuclear model since there was no change in the Sun''s visible energy output that accompanied the phenomenon.
Data from Ulysses show that the solar wind originates in holes in the sun's corona, and the speed of the solar wind varies inversely with coronal temperature. "This was completely unexpected," said Lanzerotti. "Theorists had predicted the opposite. Now all models of the sun and the solar wind will have to explain this observation."
I missed an opportunity. This finding could have been predicted from the electrical model of the Sun.

The standard model of the solar wind has it "boiling off" the Sun so that you would expect a direct correlation between coronal temperature and solar wind speed. That is precisely the opposite of what the Ulysses spacecraft saw.
In the electric model of the Sun, where the solar electric field is strong in the coronal holes, protons of the solar wind are being strongly accelerated away from the Sun. Their random motion becomes less significant in a process called de-thermalization. Outside the coronal holes, where the coronal electric field is weaker, the protons move more aimlessly. As a result they suffer more collisions and move more randomly. The degree of random movement of particles directly equates to temperature. So the solar wind is fastest where the corona appears coolest and the solar wind is slowest where the corona appears hottest — as Ulysses found. Wal Thornhill
http://www.holoscience.com/news.php?article=by2r22xg

Sure I read this but is doesn’t explain the variability of the solar wind IMHO
(my bold)
Abstract
a large, tenuous, and slow plasma cloud engulfed our planet around this time, which could be because of a co rotating low-density narrow stream
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2001JGR...10625121V

So I’m to be blamed for NASA’s dramatic prose?

The Day the Solar Wind Disappeared
Dropping to a fraction of its normal density and to half its normal speed, the solar wind died down enough to allow physicists to observe particles flowing directly from the Sun's corona to Earth. This severe change in the solar wind also changed the shape of Earth's magnetic field and produced an unusual auroral display at the North Pole.
http://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/1999/ast13dec99_1/

The EU/PC explanation for the variability of the solar wind makes sense and also explains the various solar cycles. Mainstream has no explanation that I have read.

THE SUN — Our Variable Star
Important Consequences of the Electric Star Model for the Sun.

2. Near the Sun, galactic transmission lines are in the form of 0.3 parsecs wide rotating Birkeland filaments (based on those detected at the center of the Milky Way). Their motion relative to the Sun will produce a slowly varying magnetic field and current density –' in other words a solar activity cycle. To that extent, all stars are variable. And just like real estate, location is vital.
http://www.holoscience.com/news.php?article=by2r22xg
 
If you read again what I posted you will notice Wal Thornhill at the end not Haig ;)

They'll figure it out sooner or later, but not before they are done having their fun. ;)

Our Sun, like all stars, is a variable star. We must learn to live with the uncertainty of a star that is a product of its environment. We can expect our Sun to change when it enters regions of interstellar space where there is more or less dust, which alters the plasma characteristics.

I think the questions become *how* variable, and how much *total* variation are we talking about? You'll note that during the timeline in question the sun did not "turn off" along with the solar wind. It still shined. It still radiated heat. If the sun were externally powered, wouldn't the photosphere have also gone dark? :)

Keep in mind that no "electric sun" model is precluded from having an *internal* energy source that "interacts" electromagnetically with the the interstellar "dust" buffeting the heliosphere.

In Birkeland's model the sun is internally powered and acts as a "cathode" but produces both types of particles in terms of solar wind. Compared to the heliosphere however, the cathode (under the surface of the photosphere) is charged negatively with respect to the interstellar winds.

In Scott's model, the sun acts as an anode, but technically it's not limited to a completely *external* energy source like Jergeunson's version.
 
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I don't need to fit in anywhere, I am just fine where I am, a reasonably well established space physicist with about 100 publications and an h-factor of 19.

I think it is pretty clear what I mean. You want to pin down Peratt by his one sentence (the rapid transfer of E or B energy), but that is not the whole quote. Peratt continues to add to that, about a break down of the medium, when certain stresses are exceeded.

So what? An "electrical discharge" can "go through" a solid (provided it's a conductor) and "pinch" that solid in a way that would normally not occur in that very same solid.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinch_(plasma_physics)
128px-Crushed_rod_pollock_barraclough.jpg


*IF* there is enough *current flow* through the "conductor", *THEN* it "may" ionize all the atoms to a fully ionized state. Even an electrical discharge in the Earth's atmosphere is not likely to fully ionize every single atom in the discharge filament.

We'll get to the rest in due time, but until and unless we can both agree that a "discharge" can occur in atoms in *ALL* it various states (including plasma), then there's little to discuss.

A plasma can be in a "glow" discharge mode, and yet a "discharge arc" can still be generated due to an "electrical discharge" if we suddenly crank up the current flow.
 
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In Birkeland's model the sun acts as a "cathode" but produces both types of particles in terms of solar wind. Compared to the heliosphere however, the cathode (under the surface of the photosphere) is charged negatively with respect to the interstellar winds.


That is a ludicrous, and of course dishonest interpretation of anything Birkeland ever considered with his terrella experiments. There is nothing remotely honest or even realistic in that argument. The electric Sun cranks make up this nonsense as they go along, and argue by spitting on the graves of dead scientists.
 
I don't always have time to put things in quotes but the name at the end is a clue as to whose words they are.

Find the time. It's very bad form to quote without using either quotation marks or the quote tags. Hell, you don't even need to type anything, just select the text in question, and then hit that little quote icon above the text box. It's the one just to the left of the # icon.


I notice they still won't attach numbers to their ideas. That page also refers to Juergens, who had the ◊◊◊◊◊◊* crazy idea that the sun had a voltage of 10 billion volts. And they have the audacity to claim that this physically impossible scenario, which STILL wouldn't power the sun for even 1 second, "has so far passed the harsh tests of observed reality." Why on earth do you expect us to swallow such utter tripe?

You keep posting links and quotes to sources that keep saying the same nonsense. None of them can explain the total power output of the sun. In fact, none of them appear to be even trying.
 
Keep in mind that no "electric sun" model is precluded from having an *internal* energy source that "interacts" electromagnetically with the the interstellar "dust" buffeting the heliosphere.

It is my understanding that in the conventional model, the solar wind keeps the vast majority of the interstellar dust from getting within many AU of the sun. Do some EU/PC theories rely on direct solar interaction with interstellar material to explain some of the sun's behavior?

And if so, would this mean that stars should exhibit dramatically different behavior if they're extragalactic or imbedded in nebulae?
 
Solar Wind "Disappearance Event" of 1999

Sure I read this but is doesn’t explain the variability of the solar wind IMHO
(my bold)
Abstract
a large, tenuous, and slow plasma cloud engulfed our planet around this time, which could be because of a co rotating low-density narrow stream

http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2001JGR...10625121V

So I’m to be blamed for NASA’s dramatic prose?

The solar wind did not "turn off" at any time during this event.

Haig selects a sentence from the abstract to make a big deal out of the words "could be". But let us repeat that exercise, this time looking at the entire abstract. Emphasis here is mine of course.


Interplanetary scintillation observations for the solar wind disappearance event of May 1999
Vats, et al., Journal of Geophysical Research 106(A11): 25121-25124, November 2001
Abstract: In this article we present ground-based interplanetary scintillation (IPS) measurements at 103 and 327 MHz for the period of the solar wind disappearance event of May 1999 as seen by various space probes. The solar wind velocity measurements at 327 MHz showed a variable solar wind velocity during this period at a distance of ~0.5 AU from the Sun. The average solar wind velocity from three radio sources varied in the range of 200-300 km s-1. The scintillation index measurements at 103 MHz indicate that plasma density was very low in the interplanetary medium closer to the Earth and that the density was normal away from it during May 11-13. The scintillation index was enhanced significantly on May 14 after the disappearance event. The comparison with the in situ observations shows that the effect is dramatic in IPS observations. IPS and in situ measurements show that a large, tenuous, and slow plasma cloud engulfed our planet around this time, which could be because of a corotating low-density narrow stream. From the source (Sun) point of view, this was mostly a normal plasma flow in most of the interplanetary medium.
As the reader can see, quite regardless of what may or may not have cause the solar wind in the vicinity of Earth to drop significantly in density, it is clear from both ground based radio scintillation data as well as in situ spacecraft data, that the solar wind throughout the remainder of the heliosphere was seen to be quite normal.

So I’m to be blamed for NASA’s dramatic prose?
No, but you certainly are to blame for thinking that reading a press release is the way to learn science. They are always dramatic, compelling, and quite frankly slanted to titillate the intellect rather than convey proper information. If you keep citing press releases as your major source, regardless of where they come from, you're just going to keep having the same problem.

What did happen? Well like Vats et al. say, maybe a low density streamer from the Sun intersected the path of the Earth. Or maybe something else. Usmanov, et al., 2005 say the low density stream explanation is apparently incorrect. They point out that spacecraft data show strong non-radial flow indicative of a rarefaction trailing a fast flow. They ran an MHD model of the solar wind under such conditions, and are able to reproduce conditions in their model solar wind that are similar to those measured in the real solar wind. So their explanation is certainly consistent with observation. But then Janardhan, et al., 2005 have identified the source region on the sun for the low density flow. They identify the area around active region AR8525 as the source of a "stable uni-polar flow" which engulfed the Earth and is apparently not associated with any global solar cycle. Furthermore, Janardhan, et al., 2008 identify the source regions on the Sun for two more similar "solar wind disappearance events" in March & May 2002, which did not get so much press. It would appear that such events are in fact not quite so rare, and readily associated with active regions on the Sun. Janardhan, Tripathi & Mason, 2008 are more specific, tracing the origin of the 1999 event to the boundary of a coronal hole adjacent to the active region AR8525; their abstract reads, in part, "Results: We find a dynamic evolution taking place in the CH-AR boundary at the source region of the disappearance event of 11 May 1999. This evolution, which is found to reduce the area of the CH, is accompanied by the formation of new loops in EUV images that are spatially-and-temporally correlated with emerging flux regions as seen in MDI data."

There you have it. Why can't the "scientists" at Thunderbolts do what I did, spend a few minutes looking through the abstract databases and see what really happened? This happens over & over & over, Haig posts some cut & paste job from Thunderbolts that is supposed to crash like thunder over the mainstream explanation, I spend a few minutes playing around in the databases, and prove that they don't have clue.

Now can we finally stop repeating this falsehood that the solar wind actually stopped? It did not.
 
So what? An "electrical discharge" can "go through" a solid (provided it's a conductor) and "pinch" that solid in a way that would normally not occur in that very same solid.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinch_(plasma_physics)

And because you want to discuss electrical discharges you show a picture of a PINCH, yeah, really clever. It is clear that a strong current flowed through that pipe (lightning rod) and the pinch effect (i.e. the attractive force of parallel currents) squashed it. An experiment that apparently was done by Pollock and Barraclough in 1905. What does this have to do with electrical discharges? Exactly NOTHING.

The only thing it is related to is lightning, which we know is a discharge. A strong charge separation between clouds and ground is produced, and at one point the break down electric field of the atmosphere is crossed and a lightning discharge happens. The fact that it has hit the lightning rod has absolutely nothing to do with discharges, but with other kind of physics, i.e. that charges prefer to be located at such poles and facilitates the lightning to find a closest point to strike at.

*IF* there is enough *current flow* through the "conductor", *THEN* it "may" ionize all the atoms to a fully ionized state. Even an electrical discharge in the Earth's atmosphere is not likely to fully ionize every single atom in the discharge filament.

stop your frakking *"""*"'""* that is so irritating. It is not even clear how you use these thing, and whether or not it really is important what you CAPITALIZE or what you put in ** or in "" or in '' or whatever.

So, you want to ionize all the atoms in that lightning rod? Good luck with that.

We'll get to the rest in due time, but until and unless we can both agree that a "discharge" can occur in atoms in *ALL* it various states (including plasma), then there's little to discuss.

A discharge CANNOT occur in atoms, it can occur in a medium when as by Peratt: a break down of the medium, when certain stresses are exceeded. Do you understand what Peratt writes here?

If I discharge my battery in my car, by leaving the lights turned on over night after I parked. I guess you call that an electrical discharge too. The word discharge has a broad meaning, and that has to be seen in context, which obviously you are not able to.

A plasma can be in a "glow" discharge mode, and yet a "discharge arc" can still be generated due to an "electrical discharge" if we suddenly crank up the current flow.

(From Wiki) Glow discharge plasmas: non-thermal plasmas generated by the application of DC or low frequency RF (<100 kHz) electric field to the gap between two metal electrodes. Probably the most common plasma; this is the type of plasma generated within fluorescent light tubes.

Here the discharge is creating the plasma, if you turn off the voltage, the plasma disappears. The glowing is because of the limited amount of collisions with electrons, which make that there can be de-excitation of the ions.

You cannot crank up the current, what you can do is that you increase the voltage on the electrodes.

Okay, now you can come with your plasma ball again.
 
from Wal Thornhill …“Countless billions of dollars have been wasted based on the thermonuclear model of stars. For example, trying to generate electricity from thermonuclear fusion, “just like the Sun.” The thought that solar scientists have it completely backwards has not troubled anyone’s imagination. The little fusion power that has been generated on Earth has required phenomenal electric power input, “just like the Sun!”
Sure there is:Cosmic Electric Lights


Besides that already noted by others, Thornhill’s remarks take on a different level of inanity when we consider the sources of the electrical power to which he remarks. Not from some ubiquitous unimaginable impossibly large or self perpetuating charge separation, electricity here on Earth is generated by other sources of energy resulting in said charge separations.

Chemical in the case of fossil fuels
Gravitational in the case of hydro-electric
And nuclear in the case of fission reactors

Though I guess EC/PC proponents wouldn’t be so inclined if their attention didn’t just simply stop at charge separation (electricity) and ignoring the forces and energies needed to result in such charge separations. In that regard why should we then stop at simply the energy sources mentioned above driving such man made charge separations here on Earth.

In fact the first two, fossil fuels and hydro-electric, can be traced back to radiant energy from our own sun. The fossil fuel being chemical energy stored from photosynthesis during Earth’s carboniferous period. Hydro-electric power results from the motion of water molecules from lower gravitational potential energies to higher gravitational potential energies in Earth’s water cycle, also driven by radiant energy from our own sun.

The last, fission reactors, depends on unstable heavy elements formed by the nuclear fusion in past generations of stars.

So in fact all are results of solar fusion which is itself driven by gravity and we wouldn’t even stop there, but for the fact that currently we have nowhere else to go after gravity, which may of course eventually change once we have a unified field theory that successfully combines General Relativity with Quantum Field Theory.
 
My Dear Haig,

You know I love you man, but......

It's really important IMO not to take a sentence or two out of context.

The solar wind is both highly directional and highly variable over time. A "lull" in that output around Earth, or even around a few satellites *and* Earth, would not necessarily mean the *entire* spherical solar wind had "stopped". I think you'll probably need to retreat from that position sooner or later. IMO it's better to bite the bullet now, than to get too far out on a limb. I think the relevant points can be observed in SOHO LASCO C2 and C3 images. If you notice there are 'streamers' that are highly directional. A short lull in one specific direction would hardly imply that the *entire* sphere of the sun experienced *no* solar wind. You might go through and look at a few Lasco images so you understand what I mean.

http://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/data/realtime/mpeg/
 
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And because you want to discuss electrical discharges you show a picture of a PINCH, yeah, really clever.

Actually, I want to talk about "pinches" caused by "current" flowing through "conductors". :)

It is clear that a strong current flowed through that pipe (lightning rod) and the pinch effect (i.e. the attractive force of parallel currents) squashed it. An experiment that apparently was done by Pollock and Barraclough in 1905. What does this have to do with electrical discharges? Exactly NOTHING.

That's not quite true. It was an "electrical discharge" that struck that copper tubing, and the current flow through that tubing that caused that "pinch" in the "conductor."

The only thing it is related to is lightning, which we know is a discharge. A strong charge separation between clouds and ground is produced, and at one point the break down electric field of the atmosphere is crossed and a lightning discharge happens.

And that "circuit" is completed by the copper tubing which is in turn "pinched" from the magnetic field generated *BY* the current flowing through it during the discharge process.

The fact that it has hit the lightning rod has absolutely nothing to do with discharges, but with other kind of physics, i.e. that charges prefer to be located at such poles and facilitates the lightning to find a closest point to strike at.

Well, electricity seeks the path of least resistance and tubing was the least resistant path to ground. The "current flow" was a "conditional" process. The tubing is typically "non current carrying" but during the "discharge process", the "conductor" was "pinched" due to "current flows' that are not always present. Plasma can act the same way.

You to be ignoring two key points here. The fact a material is *conductor* isn't doesn't 'prevent' a 'discharge', in fact it's a REQUIREMENT during the "discharge process". There also two different states to consider, a *NON* current carrying state and a current carrying state.

stop your frakking *"""*"'""* that is so irritating. It is not even clear how you use these thing, and whether or not it really is important what you CAPITALIZE or what you put in ** or in "" or in '' or whatever.

It's an attempt at work emphasis that seems to be more annoying than helpful I suppose.

So, you want to ionize all the atoms in that lightning rod? Good luck with that.

Well, with enough current flow, it could be done, but you're right, it would take a lot of sustained energy.

A discharge CANNOT occur in atoms, it can occur in a medium when as by Peratt: a break down of the medium, when certain stresses are exceeded. Do you understand what Peratt writes here?

Sure. I admit I'm comparing apples to oranges or in this case solids to plasmas, but both are 'conductors" and both are capable of "conducting" current flows that "heat" the materials, and "pinch" those materials together.

If I discharge my battery in my car, by leaving the lights turned on over night after I parked. I guess you call that an electrical discharge too. The word discharge has a broad meaning, and that has to be seen in context, which obviously you are not able to.
That's not the case. I'm simply pointing out that breakdown in the medium is irrelevant, it's the "current flow" that matters in terms of the "pinch".

(From Wiki) Glow discharge plasmas: non-thermal plasmas generated by the application of DC or low frequency RF (<100 kHz) electric field to the gap between two metal electrodes. Probably the most common plasma; this is the type of plasma generated within fluorescent light tubes.

Here the discharge is creating the plasma, if you turn off the voltage, the plasma disappears. The glowing is because of the limited amount of collisions with electrons, which make that there can be de-excitation of the ions.

You cannot crank up the current, what you can do is that you increase the voltage on the electrodes.

Well, the point is we go go from a "glow" discharge (or no discharge at all) to an "arc discharge" in plasma. The fact it's a plasma, even a "current carrying" plasma doesn't prevent it from experiencing "discharges" of unusually high "current flows".

The fact a plasma happens to exist, and the fact it's a "conductor" do not prevent it from being raised to a higher energy state during a "discharge" through that plasma.
 
http://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/1999/ast13dec99_1/

Starting late on May 10 and continuing through the early hours of May 12, NASA's ACE and Wind spacecraft each observed that the density of the solar wind dropped by more than 98%. Because of the decrease, energetic electrons from the Sun were able to flow to Earth in narrow beams, known as the strahl. Under normal conditions, electrons from the Sun are diluted, mixed, and redirected in interplanetary space and by Earth's magnetic field (the magnetosphere). But in May 1999, several satellites detected electrons arriving at Earth with properties similar to those of electrons in the Sun's corona, suggesting that they were a direct sample of particles from the Sun.

"This event provides a window to see the Sun's corona directly," said Dr. Keith Ogilvie, project scientist for NASA's Wind spacecraft and a space physicist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD. "The beams from the corona do not get broken up or scattered as they do under normal circumstances, and the temperature of the electrons is very similar to their original state on the Sun."

Emphasis mine. Keep in mind Haig that they still observed high speed electrons coming from the sun. Essentially the proton count (density) dropped 98%, but not necessarily the electron count.
 
It is my understanding that in the conventional model, the solar wind keeps the vast majority of the interstellar dust from getting within many AU of the sun. Do some EU/PC theories rely on direct solar interaction with interstellar material to explain some of the sun's behavior?

In the sense that the surface electromagnetically interacts with the heliosphere, yes.

And if so, would this mean that stars should exhibit dramatically different behavior if they're extragalactic or imbedded in nebulae?

How come Beetlejuice seems to change in size?

http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn17282-betelgeuse-the-incredible-shrinking-star.html
 
FYI, it's nuts at work at the moment, so forgive my spelling and grammar today. Oy. (not that I ever do much proofreading mind you, but today is just nuts around here).
 
My Dear Haig,

You know I love you man, but......

It's really important IMO not to take a sentence or two out of context.

The solar wind is both highly directional and highly variable over time. A "lull" in that output around Earth, or even around a few satellites *and* Earth, would not necessarily mean the *entire* spherical solar wind had "stopped". I think you'll probably need to retreat from that position sooner or later. IMO it's better to bite the bullet now, than to get too far out on a limb. I think the relevant points can be observed in SOHO LASCO C2 and C3 images. If you notice there are 'streamers' that are highly directional. A short lull in one specific direction would hardly imply that the *entire* sphere of the sun experienced *no* solar wind. You might go through and look at a few Lasco images so you understand what I mean.

http://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/data/realtime/mpeg/


However, we must keep in mind that looking at pictures is a stupid method of doing science, non-quantitative, amateur, subjective, and as usual with crackpots, dishonest.
 
However, we must keep in mind that looking at pictures is a stupid method of doing science, non-quantitative, amateur, subjective, and as usual with crackpots, dishonest.

http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=6711945&postcount=1198

Three (almost 4) days now and counting and still you haven't rescinded your false claims? Since everyone knows you haven't read Alfven's work, you won't discuss his circuit approach to MHD theory, and you refuse to acknowledge your own blatant mistakes, do you really think anyone is taking you seriously anymore?
 
I thought that the heliosphere had very little interstellar matter because the solar wind was continuously blowing the interstellar matter away.

I would assume it works a bit like the Earth's magnetosphere and has a similar teardrop shape in fact.

<shrug> I'm not the right person to ask.

I'm just pointing out that stars have some very unusual behaviors that might have something to do with the interstellar medium they happen to be traversing at the moment. Passing through a more dense (or less dense) regions of interstellar space may in fact generate unusual solar wind patterns and unusual light emission patterns as well.
 
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