Michael Mozina wrote:Nereid wrote:MM: It took nearly 70 years to prove that Birkeland currents exist.
N: So Birkeland was really lucky then? He did some work which, at the time, was not able to be tested; later, when tests were possible, his models came home winners.
MM: Luck had nothing to do with it Nereid. He took the time to stomp around the northern polar regions and take measurements on his relatively "primitive" equipment and deduced from that data that there was an electrical connection between the sun and the earth. He then assembled what must have been one of the most sophisticated labs of the day, and tested all kinds of models and different voltages and different EM field strengths. He took pictures, and made drawings of his work. Nothing was left to "chance".
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If so, then what took "nearly 70 years"?
"Acceptance by the mainstream" took nearly 70 years Nereid.
Just so that I don't misunderstand...
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MM: It took nearly 70 years to prove that Birkeland currents exist.
N: what took "nearly 70 years"?
MM: "[a]cceptance by the mainstream" took nearly 70 years
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Are you saying that the 'proof' (that Birkeland currents exist) had nothing (or very little) to do with observations made after 1917?
Rather it had (nearly) everything to do with "Acceptance by the mainstream"?
Even to this day astronomers continue to downplay the importance and significance of electrical currents in the universe. If currents flow between the sun and the earth, and between planets and moons, then its highly likely that they flow between the sun and the galaxy and between galaxies too.
And it is this sort of word salad, muddle-headed approach that exemplifies the difference between "Michael Mozina science" and modern astrophysics.
Specifically, the "currents" - in the IPM (inter-planetary medium) - can be measured by
in situ probes (such as
Ulysses, and in the near-Earth environment by probes such as
Cluster), and modelled using Alfvén's MHD (and more up-to-date plasma theories) -
quantitatively.
These (
in situ) observational results and models can be extended to the
ISM (interstellar medium), again,
quantitatively.
However, in "Michael Mozina science", such modelling and quantitative matching of theory to observation is replaced by handwaving and unfalsifiable assertions, based on who knows what.
Michael, it's entirely possible that there are currents in the ISM (and even the IGM), but one doesn't 'do astronomy' by asserting that they exist and not testing this assertion
through quantitative modelling and detailed, quantitative, observations.
It would seem that every time I - or others - have asked you for the step beyond a qualitative assertion, you choose to not reply.*
How long will it take LMSAL to figure out that electrical current is what is heating the coronal loops to millions of degrees, and that these loops are the heat source for the corona?
Birkeland figured that one out over 100 years ago by the way. 100 years later, even with million dollar satellite images, LMSAL can't "see" the obvious.
He did?
And you can cite papers, by Birkeland, in which he gave a
quantitative account of coronal loops, including sufficient
quantitative detail (in his models) to allow anyone to estimate how well -
quantitatively - the photon flux detected by "LMSAL" instruments, in all wavebands, matches those models?
*I'd be happy to go through this, chapter and verse, if you like. Perhaps starting with "
perfect example of MDH [sic] theory in action, and it's a perfect example of electricity flowing through "thin" plasmas"