Anode Sun vs Cathode Sun

Beyond the boundaries of established science an avalanche of exotic ideas compete for our attention. Experts tell us that these ideas should not be permitted to take up the time of working scientists, and for the most part they are surely correct. But what about the gems in the rubble pile? By what ground-rules might we bring extraordinary new possibilities to light?

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Re: Anode Sun vs Cathode Sun

Unread post by Sparky » Wed Apr 03, 2013 7:41 am

The report was for x-rays, that is proven,
That is what "I thought I remembered". :?

I am not privy to test parameters. :?

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Re: Anode Sun vs Cathode Sun

Unread post by D_Archer » Wed Apr 03, 2013 11:43 am

I think i release x-rays when i comb my hair :P

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Re: Anode Sun vs Cathode Sun

Unread post by Lloyd » Thu Apr 04, 2013 11:56 am

Charles' Sun Model Arguments
Charles, I posted your Sun model summary arguments at http://thunderbolts.info/wp/forum/phpBB3/v ... 120#p81388 recently. I divided the arguments into sections called:
1. Proof That the Sun's Distinct Limb Is Not Due to Gravity
2. Proof That It’s Not Due to Magnetism
3. Proof That It’s Not Due to Just One Layer of Surface Electric Charge
4. Proof That It’s Due to Compressive Ionization in a Deeper Layer
5. Proof That It’s Not Due to an Anode Configuration, But to a Cathode One
6. How the PNP Layers Formed

Your arguments seem rather sound and conclusive to me, but, to help nail them down a bit more, I have a few questions here.

Plasmoids
You reasoned that the distinct spherical surface of the Sun can only be due to a cathode PNP triple layer in the Sun. What is the cause of the similar distinct surface of ball lightning and in plasmoids? Do you think ball lightning is a plasmoid? Can plasmoids be light-weight like ball lightning and float in air? Is it the magnetic field that makes a plasmoid a smooth sphere? Does ball lightning vary from spherical to ovoid? And, if so, would that be due to fluctuation of the B-field or something else? And would the shapes of plasmoid stars etc be able to vary in the same way? Or would plasmoid stars be high density instead of light-weight like ball lightning?

Solid Iron Sun Models
- Do your arguments disprove Brant's and Michael's iron sun models?
- I think Brant says the solid iron crust is 600 or 700 km below the top of the photosphere, while Michael says it's 4,800 km below.
Your "Preview" paper said:
Charged double-layers wouldn't seem possible, since hydrogen plasma at 6,000 K is an excellent conductor. There are only two forces that can maintain a charge separation in the absence of any resistance whatsoever: the magnetic force, and compressive ionization. We already ruled out the magnetic force, so compressive ionization is the only candidate.

- Is there resistance in galactic nebulae or in atoms and molecules, where electrons and protons or ions are separated? If not, which force maintains the separation in such cases? Magnetic? If not magnetic or CI, then your statement above would need to be modified.
- Would it be possible for a solid iron layer to overlie a compressively ionized layer, say if the temperature were 4,000K?
- Or would the iron have to be ionized? And would ionization make it non-solid?
- I think you said compressively ionized matter could only be dense liquid plasma. Is that right?

It looks like you may have your proof against the iron Sun models, although your model is actually considerably iron too, but your iron is much deeper and not solid.

Well, there is a potential obstacle to proof for you here, i.e. the theory that gravity is only a surface phenomenon, which Brant subscribes to. I think he favors the theory of Fatio(?) and LeSage, but I don't remember what evidence they may have mentioned for that theory. If the theory is false, I'd like to see a disproof of it somewhere.

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Re: Anode Sun vs Cathode Sun

Unread post by CharlesChandler » Fri Apr 05, 2013 3:23 am

Lloyd wrote:You reasoned that the distinct spherical surface of the Sun can only be due to a cathode PNP triple layer in the Sun. What is the cause of the similar distinct surface of ball lightning and in plasmoids? Do you think ball lightning is a plasmoid? Can plasmoids be light-weight like ball lightning and float in air? Is it the magnetic field that makes a plasmoid a smooth sphere? Does ball lightning vary from spherical to ovoid? And, if so, would that be due to fluctuation of the B-field or something else? And would the shapes of plasmoid stars etc be able to vary in the same way? Or would plasmoid stars be high density instead of light-weight like ball lightning?
First of all, I'm not an expert on ball lightning, so I'm not sure about the distinct surface. Recent research has shown that clumps of silicon vapor, liberated by a lightning strike to the ground, can sustain re-oxidization for several seconds in the air, and can display fancy behaviors like bouncing off the ground, and crackling/spitting, in a way that "seems" quite similar to the reports of ball lightning. (See Paiva, G. S. et al., 2010: Energy density calculations for ball-lightning-like luminous silicon balls. Physics-Uspekhi, 53 (2): 209.) So ball lightning might not be an EM phenomenon per se, but rather, just another form of fire. Its roughly spherical shape might be an artifact of how the fuel is temporarily kept consolidated by the reaction going on at its periphery.

As concerns plasmoids, we'd first have to nail down exactly what type of plasmoids we're talking about. Wikipedia defines a plasmoid as a coherent structure of plasma and magnetic fields (after Bostick, of course). In the MHD literature, this could mean just about anything, but if we're talking about spherical structures, then we're talking about toroidal plasmoids (i.e., tokamaks, where the current rotates around the axis, and the magnetic field is solenoidal) or "spheromaks" (where the current moves like in a smoke ring, and the magnetic field rotates around the axis). Both of these are theoretically capable of charge separations due to magnetic pressure, and thus they can develop current-free double-layers. But my understanding of the pinch effect is that at less than the speed of light, the magnetic force is weaker than the electric force. So while the magnetic force can separate opposite charges and consolidate like charges, at speeds less than c it cannot complete the consolidation, and actually push the atoms into contact with each other. (The fusion that occurs inside tokamaks has as much to do with the collisions of particles spinning in the poloidal fields as it does with confinement from the toroidal fields.) As such, we wouldn't expect plasmoids to have distinct surfaces, since they are not capable of producing condensed matter. So plasmoids are low-density coherent structures, and if, in free space, charged double-layers appear, they will be CFDLs, but they will have indistinct boundaries. So my conception of a plasmoidal exotic star (e.g., a black hole) is of a very large, high aspect ratio torus, with a large major (annular) radius and a small minor (tubular) radius, and with a relativistic annular current. In other words, it might have a major radius of something like 1 AU, but the tube might only have the thickness of the Sun. And there won't be any distinct surfaces. Matter streaming in from the accretion disc will be first atomized, and then charge-separated, by the magnetic forces, and the protons will be forced into the tube where fusion will occur.
Lloyd wrote:Do your arguments disprove Brant's and Michael's iron sun models? I think Brant says the solid iron crust is 600 or 700 km below the top of the photosphere, while Michael says it's 4800 km below.
I think that the so-called "convective" zone (which actually doesn't convect as much as scientists once thought) is mainly supercritical hydrogen & helium, except the topmost 4800 km (which Michael calls the solar atmosphere, and which I call the granular layer), which is still dense enough to display hydrodynamic behaviors, but is not supercritical. As such, the granular layer does not emit black-body radiation (which can only come from solids or supercritical fluids), but rather, is responsible for the absorption lines in the solar spectrum. So Michael & I agree on the general characteristics of the topmost 4800 km as being much thinner, and we disagree with Brant that there is anything special about the topmost 700 km. But I disagree with both of them that there are solids in the convective zone. I think that the temperature is too high for solids (i.e., > 6000 K). So I think that the convective zone has all of the properties of a supercritical fluid, and none of the properties of a solid. I also disagree that there is that much iron, that close to the surface, though Michael's study of the running-difference imagery, and Brant's study of coronal moss, certainly prove that there are irregular concentrations of iron at and near the surface. But the spectroscopy tells us that iron averages only 1 part in 30,000 compared to hydrogen.
Lloyd wrote:Is there resistance in galactic nebulae or in atoms and molecules, where electrons and protons or ions are separated? If not, which force maintains the separation in such cases?
There certainly isn't any resistance at the atomic or molecular scale, so those charge separations can only be because of electric and/or magnetic fields. Above that scale, charges can be separated by electric, magnetic, or inertial forces, and then the separation can be maintained by the same electric or magnetic forces, or by electrical resistance. In the Sun, I don't see any evidence of counter-streaming jets that would produce charge separations by inertial forces. (This is what some people roughly attribute to triboelectric charging, but which is actually more akin to electron temperature ionization. Regardless, I don't see it in the Sun.) And at 6000 K, I don't see any electrical resistance. That leaves electric and/or magnetic forces. And with velocities that average 2 km/s, there will definitely be magnetic fields, but they're poorly organized, and therefore, cannot account for the near-perfect spherical shape of the Sun. That leaves the electric force. And in the absence of resistance, CFDLs can only be caused by compressive ionization.
Lloyd wrote:Would it be possible for a solid iron layer to overlie a compressively ionized layer...
Yes. In the Earth, the solid crust overlies what I consider to be an ionized mantle & core, which I believe got that way due to pressure.
Lloyd wrote:...say if the temperature were 4000 K?
No. ;) The phase diagram of iron is complex, but I have never seen one where they had solid iron at 4000 K, regardless of pressure.

Image
Lloyd wrote:Or would the iron have to be ionized? And would ionization make it non-solid? I think you said compressively ionized matter could only be dense liquid plasma. Is that right?
Yes, solids only tolerate a little bit of ionization before the crystal lattice fails, even at absolute zero, and then you get the properties of a liquid (or gas, or plasma), regardless of temperature. And the iron that we see in the Sun is highly ionized (i.e., IX, X, XII, and XV). Those ain't solids. ;)
Lloyd wrote:It looks like you may have your proof against the iron Sun models, although your model is actually considerably iron too, but your iron is much deeper and not solid.
Yes, in my model, the entire so-called "radiative zone" (which doesn't radiate anything in my model) is iron & nickel. But as mentioned above, there are also important concentrations of iron in the so-called convective zone. For example, CMEs appear to have a very high amount of iron, which I believe congregates around sunspot shafts. BTW, Robitaille believes that the liquid crystal hydrogen forms an impermeable lattice that prevents gravitational settling of heavy elements. I'm not sure about his graphite-like crystal lattice (I think the electrons are unbound, and there isn't any lattice), but there might still be something to that idea. My model naively assumes perfect mass separation, but the truth might be a lot more complex than that.
Lloyd wrote:Well, there is a potential obstacle to proof for you here, i.e. the theory that gravity is only a surface phenomenon, which Brant subscribes to. I think he favors the theory of Fatio and LeSage, but I don't remember what evidence they may have mentioned for that theory. If the theory is false, I'd like to see a disproof of it somewhere.
You're right -- in the Fatio/LeSage model of gravity, pressure is exerted from the outside by the impacts of the unseen corpuscles zipping through the Universe in all directions. This would mean that there would be no increase in pressure inside a solid object, and that would blow up my compressive ionization model, which relies on the internal pressure increasing with proximity to the center. I haven't studied the Fatio/LeSage model in detail, but here's what Feynman had to say about it.
Richard Feynman wrote:In 1965 Richard Feynman examined the Fatio/Lesage mechanism, primarily as an example of an attempt to explain a "complicated" physical law (in this case, Newton's inverse-square law of gravity) in terms of simpler primitive operations without the use of complex mathematics, and also as an example of a failed theory. He notes that the mechanism of "bouncing particles" reproduces the inverse-square force law and that "the strangeness of the mathematical relation will be very much reduced", but then remarks that the scheme "does not work", because of the drag it predicts would be experienced by moving bodies, "so that is the end of that theory".
In other words, the premise of the Fatio/LeSage model is that a fixed amount of inertia is exerted from all directions by the corpuscles. This implies fixed velocities of the corpuscles from a universal reference point. And that means that any object moving with respect to that reference point would encounter more pressure on its windward side. Eventually, all relative motion would cease, and all matter in the Universe would be pressed into a singular clump. For Feynman, that was the end of it. But here we have to remember that gravity is the weakest of the forces. A near infinitesimal electric force could override the "gravitational drag" force. So I don't think it's a closed issue.
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Re: Anode Sun vs Cathode Sun

Unread post by D_Archer » Fri Apr 05, 2013 7:41 am

The iron is in the plasma state not solid, but displays behaviour like a solid and that is what Mozina found. How can plasma do this? It are the same forces that make the crust of the earth solid state, one is gravity the other is charge (gravity is force in, charge is force out), the meeting zone is where the crust forms, this is true for all planetary bodies, the location where the crust froms depends on composition/density and amount of matter. And yes gravity is only a surface phenomena defined by radius.

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Re: Anode Sun vs Cathode Sun

Unread post by CharlesChandler » Fri Apr 05, 2013 8:23 am

Now that I got to thinking about the Fatio/LeSage theory of gravity, I have a question. According to Wikipedia, the TauTona Mine is a gold mine in South Africa. At some 3.9 kilometers (2.4 mi) deep it is currently home to the world's deepest mining operations. That's pretty far from the surface. Are the miners weightless when they get down to the bottom, since they aren't being bombarded with the gravity corpuscles that only act on the surface? Or do the gravity corpuscles penetrate the surface, and continue to impart inertial forces? We know that the pressure in the ocean increases steadily with depth, so gravity cannot possibly be a "simple" surface effect. The reason for the question is that if the gravity corpuscles penetrate the surface, then increasing pressure with depth still holds, and the compressive ionization lives to fight another day. :)
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Re: Anode Sun vs Cathode Sun

Unread post by D_Archer » Fri Apr 05, 2013 12:07 pm

CharlesChandler wrote:Now that I got to thinking about the Fatio/LeSage theory of gravity, I have a question. According to Wikipedia, the TauTona Mine is a gold mine in South Africa. At some 3.9 kilometers (2.4 mi) deep it is currently home to the world's deepest mining operations. That's pretty far from the surface. Are the miners weightless when they get down to the bottom, since they aren't being bombarded with the gravity corpuscles that only act on the surface? Or do the gravity corpuscles penetrate the surface, and continue to impart inertial forces? We know that the pressure in the ocean increases steadily with depth, so gravity cannot possibly be a "simple" surface effect. The reason for the question is that if the gravity corpuscles penetrate the surface, then increasing pressure with depth still holds, and the compressive ionization lives to fight another day. :)
3.9km is not very deep. Even the moon has gravity that makes things fall down.

What are gravity corpuscles?

All oceans are above the crust. so gravity still applies for pressure.

Compressive ionization is not an actual physical process, i think you made that up yourself. Ionization of matter by definition does not compress anything it can only expand since bonds loosen.

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Re: Anode Sun vs Cathode Sun

Unread post by CharlesChandler » Fri Apr 05, 2013 1:34 pm

D_Archer wrote:What are gravity corpuscles?
In the Fatio/LeSage model, tiny unseen particles bombard everything, imparting inertial forces. They called these particles "corpuscles".
D_Archer wrote:Compressive ionization is not an actual physical process, i think you made that up yourself. Ionization of matter by definition does not compress anything it can only expand since bonds loosen.
I'm not saying that ionization compresses -- I'm saying that compression ionizes.

Saumon, D.; Chabrier, G., 1992: Fluid hydrogen at high density: Pressure ionization. Physical Review A, 46 (4): 2084-2100
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Re: Anode Sun vs Cathode Sun

Unread post by Sparky » Fri Apr 05, 2013 3:30 pm

CC:
Or do the gravity corpuscles penetrate the surface, and continue to impart inertial forces?
MJV called these corpuscles the "gravity aether", I think... :? Unless there is a gravity shadow, the aether penetrates everywhere. Therefore, at the center of a body the force would be equal from all directions, and as I understand it, no gravity. :shock:

How a singularity gets around that, I don't know.. :?
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Re: Anode Sun vs Cathode Sun

Unread post by D_Archer » Sat Apr 06, 2013 2:54 am

CharlesChandler wrote:I'm saying that compression ionizes.
And what causes compression?

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Re: Anode Sun vs Cathode Sun

Unread post by CharlesChandler » Sat Apr 06, 2013 4:50 am

D_Archer wrote:And what causes compression?
Gravity.
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Re: Anode Sun vs Cathode Sun

Unread post by Lloyd » Sat Apr 06, 2013 4:59 pm

Thornhill also says gravity compresses and ionizes matter inside stars. I can dig that up from his website if anyone would like to see his quote. It's under the topic of planet formation or star fissioning or something like that.

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Re: Anode Sun vs Cathode Sun

Unread post by D_Archer » Mon Apr 08, 2013 3:29 am

Is there any literature about gravity as a cause for ionizing matter? I have never heard of this and it sounds completely wrong.

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Re: Anode Sun vs Cathode Sun

Unread post by CharlesChandler » Mon Apr 08, 2013 5:40 am

D_Archer wrote:Is there any literature about gravity as a cause for ionizing matter?
Most of the literature refers to the Pannekoek-Rosseland field, first identified in the 1920s, and which results from protons being 1836 times heavier than electrons. Thus we would expect more positive charge at the core of a star, and more negative charge above. I actually consider this to be a trivial force, and I'm looking at other stuff. Specifically, under extreme pressure, atoms are forced together closer than their electron shells allow, resulting in the expulsion of the electrons, leaving positive ions behind. This is a much more powerful force. The Pannekoek-Rosseland field comes from the action of gravity on each individual particle (proton or electron), affecting mass separation, but pressure is the cumulative force from all of the particles above, and thus compressive ionization is much more powerful.

Saumon, D.; Chabrier, G., 1992: Fluid hydrogen at high density: Pressure ionization. Physical Review A, 46 (4): 2084-2100

Or see Chapter 8 in:

Aspden, H., 2003: The Physics of Creation. Southampton, England: Sabberton Publications
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Re: Anode Sun vs Cathode Sun

Unread post by Lloyd » Mon Apr 08, 2013 8:04 am

Compressive Ionization
I believe he discussed this in several of his online papers, but here's how Thornhill explained one type of compressive ionization at http://www.holoscience.com/wp/the-sun-o ... able-star/, though I don't know if he was referring to what Charles called the weak type of ionization, or the strong kind.
Thermal ionization of hydrogen only becomes significant at a temperature of about 100,000K. Therefore, atoms and molecules will predominate through most of a star's volume, where the gravity is strongest. That applies to the entire star in the electric model. The nucleus of each atom, which is thousands of times heavier than the electrons, will be gravitationally offset from the center of the atom. The result is that each atom becomes a small electric dipole. It is significant that if you want to discover the physics of atomic and molecular dipole forces you need to turn to chemistry texts. Such is the problem with specialization. The atomic and molecular dipoles align to form a radial electric field that causes electrons to diffuse outwards in enormously greater numbers than Eddington’s simple gravitational sorting allows. It leaves positively charged ions behind which repel one another. That electrical repulsion balances the compressive force of gravity without the need for a central heat source in the star.

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