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61~90
'06-09-26, 10:58 Tim Thompson
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Fairy tales
upriver wrote: Blackbody emission(curve) is the domain of condensed matter. Since when is the sun not "condensed matter"? I see no conflict between this "fact" and the observed radiative property of the sun. Do you? What is the conflict you see? And do remember that the mainstream position is that the BB emission comes from below the photosphere, and not from the photosphere itself.
upriver wrote: Even compressed plasma has a quasi-continium emission (lines/curve) that are/is distinguishable from a true blackbody emission (curve). That is a false statement. The "quasi continuum" is easily distinguished from a true BB curve, if the data are good enough. Always.
upriver wrote: Blackholes are the biggest boonedoggle ever because they got people to accept any kind of theoretical monkey business that came around. This is irrelevant to your own topic. It is also a fairy tale.
upriver wrote: A magnetar with a quantum magnetic gas bubble that collapses produces GRB's. (MS) This is irrelevant to your own topic. It is also not "MS" in any way, shape, manner or form, so this too must fall into the "fairly tale" category.
upriver wrote: The barrel shaped supernova remnants are the result of a Bennett pinch that produced a GRB at Rmin.(EU) This is irrelevant to your own topic. If you actually knew anything at all about Bennett pinches, you could immediately make a model of one with pencil & paper (no money or national lab required) and see if it made sense. You don't, so you can't, and this is just some blind assertion of no value.
upriver wrote: This universe is composed of normal matter, any intelligent person can see that if they ignore the beautiful calculations. This is irrelevant to your own topic. it is also a fairy tale. Any intelligent person can clearly & easily see that the universe is not made up entirely of normal matter, the simple observations are compelling & obvious. The data are inescapable. But it does take knowledge to understand this. So, just out of curiosity, do you have anything relevant to add? I mean, something associated with the idea of "Black Body and our sun ..."?
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'06-10-03, 08:36 upriver
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So, just out of curiosity, do you have anything relevant to add? I mean, something associated with the idea of "Black Body and our sun ..."? NO. The BB emission curve is better fit by solid matter not convecting plasma. I will just continue on my way. If I'm going to be required to show math to support my idea against the "standard solar model" which is completely math(aside from neutrinos and helioseismology) I have not the math skills that are required. I am going to learn math but not for this. I spent the last week reading on the Standard Model and then I went to the TRACE website and looked at pictures. Sorry, the pictures win. The sun has a solid surface. If math allows you to ignore what your eyes see then so be it. The standard model is just speculation no matter how good the math is. Helioseismology and neutrinos can be explained by other models. I am going to take the advice of everyone and concentrate on learning the math to simulate a GRB using a z-pinch. It may take some time but what else is there. Now if you can simulate a GRB with a pencil, I need your help.
If a library acts as a "preset knowledge filter", it is generally filtering out things that have been tried or theorized and found not to work. It can be a great time-saver. IF you are looking for that type of knowledge. The status quo. l doubt you would find anything that was revolutionary in a library. Its been pre approved. The freshest work in my field is pretty much only available online or in subscribed journals. I know looking in a library would have not gotten me my patent. "[0002] The present invention relates generally to sonoluminescence and, more particularly, to an acoustic driver assembly for use with a sonoluminescence cavitation chamber." http://www.freshpatents.com/Brant-Ja...ty-invdirc.php And they certainly do not talk about PEAR research. http://www.princeton.edu/~pear/ When I think I have a even a little grasp on what is required for my project, I will post for your approval.
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'06-10-04, 11:19 korjik
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If you even come close to knowing the math needed to explain a GRB with a zpinch, you will be WAAAAAAAYYY beyond the required math to work out the sun. If the pictures win, try a movie and watch the surface of the sun boil. then tell me it is solid. Lastly, I asked you twice to explain limb darkening if the sun's surface is solid and you have been ignoring my question. This is the third time: If the sun's surface is solid, how do you explain limb darkening?
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