Electric Spheres

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allynh
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Joined: Fri Aug 22, 2008 5:51 pm

Electric Spheres

Unread post by allynh » Tue Apr 24, 2012 9:01 am

I'd like to see the Team expand on this concept in more essays.

It looks like galaxies eject quasars that become globular cluster that become galaxies.

- Do globular clusters have an apparent redshift like quasars or have they "aged" to where they match the parent galaxy.

- How long does it take to pass through each stage of development; i.e., how long is each step in the changing redshift.

You guys need to put together a video describing the process, the same way you show the Saturn configuration. That will help me see things better.

Thanks...

jjohnson
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Location: Thurston County WA

Re: Electric Spheres

Unread post by jjohnson » Tue Apr 24, 2012 10:52 am

I'm with you, Allen.

Further points for investigation:

Do the spectral signatures of local globular clusters match that used to define quasars (i.e., 'anomalously ' highly red-shifted?

Is there a receding (red) doppler shift that would indicate cluster translation out and away from our galaxy?
Do the local globular clusters, if they are moving, move in the plane of the Milky Way, normal to the center of the galaxy, or in an oblique direction, and can it be inferred if their vectors track back through the center of our galaxy?

If there ARE quasar-like redshifts, do they fall into the typical quantized values seen elsewhere with groups of quasars?

Are there "disturbed" or actively turbulent areas of stars or clouds interior to these clusters, which might indicate that they passed through arms or starry regions in the past? This last may be difficult to spot from our close-in position to this action, and the possibility that obstructing stars and dust could hide such activity, seen on some plates of other galaxies where quasars are being ejected through or along arms of galaxies (Arp, Quasars, Redshifts and Controversies).

It is fascinating to try to see if our own galaxy's globular star clusters might be related to other quasars seen at great distances from us. If these globulars, particularly their individual stars which are readily resolved, indicate higher than expected redshifts, it would disrupt conventional thinking about galactic evolution and operation and could elicit a comment or a paper from Dr. Arp himself.

Not that any journal in the U.S. would publish it without a fight.

Jim

hertz
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Re: Electric Spheres

Unread post by hertz » Tue Apr 24, 2012 11:26 am

...and could elicit a comment or a paper from Dr. Arp himself.
i often wonder why guys like arp, peratt, etc don't chime in here a little more often...they'd certainly have a receptive audience!

This was the last piece i could find by ol' skip (2007)

http://arxiv.org/pdf/0712.3180.pdf
Dark Energy and the Hubble Constant
H. Arp

Dark energy is inferred from a Hubble expansion which is slower at epochs which are earlier than ours. But evidence reviewed here shows H0 for nearby galaxies is actually less than currently adopted and would instead require deceleration to reach the current value...The same considerations apply to Dark Matter. But with particle masses
growing with time, the condensation from plasmoid to proto galaxy not only does away with the need for unseen “dark matter” but also explains the intrinsic (non-velocity) redshifts of younger matter.

hertz
Posts: 147
Joined: Tue May 10, 2011 12:29 pm

Re: Electric Spheres

Unread post by hertz » Tue Apr 24, 2012 11:33 am

my bad...arp and fulton actually did these two in '08

The 2dF Redshift Survey II: UGC 8584 - Redshift Periodicity and Rings
A Cluster of High Redshift Quasars with Apparent Diameter 2.3 Degrees

jjohnson
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Re: Electric Spheres

Unread post by jjohnson » Thu Apr 26, 2012 4:29 pm

I think the reason that they don't is that they have other full-time activities that take up their available time. Also, they are not "founders" in the sense that they have ever been active on this Forum, and I doubt that they ever read it.

The EU, on the other hand, references their books and papers constantly, Peratt for his work on plasma physics (the scientific foundation of the EU paradigm, which is broader than just its physics foundation) and his scientific studies of petroglyphs worldwide as an element of universal observation long ago of a distinctive plasma formation near the south polar regions; and Arp for his ongoing work in astronomy, in particular the intrinsic redshifts of astronomical objects, quasars and quantization thereof, as it casts well-researched doubt on some of the long-held tenets of the Big Bang Theory and the concept that redshift is only an indicator of distance, thus age, and its increase with distance is evidence of the increasing expansion of the Universe, which ideas the EU does not buy into.

Jim

celeste
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Re: Electric Spheres

Unread post by celeste » Thu May 17, 2012 10:11 am

Before we talk about why clusters should or shouldn't have intrinsic quantized redshift, I think it is important to understand why quasars have intrinsic quantized redshift. This is a no brainer. Let's put together:

1. Halton Arp shows that quasars appear at the ends of jets shooting out of galaxies.
2. Ari Brynjolfsson shows that plasma can cause redshift.
3. James Weninger shows that plasma forms a cuspy halo around a galaxy (our supposed dark matter).

So it is simple: jets of matter shooting out from a galaxy cause a shock wave in the plasma surrounding the galaxy. The higher density of plasma in this shock wave causes a higher plasma induced redshift for the mass at the head of the shockwave. That is why the quasar appears redshifted compared to the galaxy. The reason redshifts are quantized is simply because shockwaves are quantized. Just as the plasma can't be compressed beyond a certain point, the plasma density induced redshift can not increase beyond this point.

seasmith
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Re: Electric Spheres

Unread post by seasmith » Thu May 17, 2012 7:07 pm

So it is simple: jets of matter shooting out from a galaxy cause a shock wave in the plasma surrounding the galaxy. The higher density of plasma in this shock wave causes a higher plasma induced redshift for the mass at the head of the shockwave. That is why the quasar appears redshifted compared to the galaxy. The reason redshifts are quantized is simply because shockwaves are quantized. Just as the plasma can't be compressed beyond a certain point, the plasma density induced redshift can not increase beyond this point.
Hi Celeste,

So if you will just define that "density", you will definitely have something going there.
;)

s

celeste
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Location: Scottsdale, Arizona

Re: Electric Spheres

Unread post by celeste » Fri May 18, 2012 11:45 am

Hi Seasmith, Yes, we do have to talk about the density of plasma both around a galaxy in general, and also around the quasars. This will allow us to answer two questions.
1. Q. Why do we only see quasars at a distance from the core of the galaxy? It sure would have been easier for Arp to show the association between galaxies and quasars if we could see two quasars just emerging from a galaxy. Why don't we see this?
A. Let's start with an analogy. You are familiar with how a sonic boom happens as a plane crosses the sound barrier? A slow plane has sound spreading out in front of it, a very fast plane has sound spreading out behind it, but right at the sound barrier, those sound waves just pile up (huge density) in front of the plane. Well with quasars we have the same thing in reverse. The jet starts out fast and slows to the "plasma barrier", where the plasma density builds in front of the jet causing that insane redshift. I know this is not a quantitative answer, but it will help conceptually.

2. Q. If our dark matter halo is really plasma as James Weninger says, and the mainstream says that there is about 10 times as much dark matter around a galaxy as there is "normal" matter, then shouldn't all those electrons out there cause scattering? How could a telescope like Hubble get clear pictures of distant galaxies?
A. Here we can get a little more quantitative. The dark matter halo (in James or mainstream "maps" of dark matter) has a radius at least as great as the radius of the galactic disk. Plus it is a more spherical halo, not like the thin disk of matter in the galaxy.
Sorry, I'm late for work, but later I hope to show that we can show a density too low to expect electrons intercepting a photon

celeste
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Re: Electric Spheres

Unread post by celeste » Fri May 18, 2012 10:27 pm

I'll get back to the density of plasma in the halo (and show that it can't cause significant scattering), but first, how do I know that quasars are an interaction between those jets and the plasma (dark matter) halo?
James Weninger says that the halo is plasma, where more electrons are gravitationally selected to the outer portion of the halo (extending outside the visible galaxy). So what is happening that let's us know that the jets are hitting those electrons? Halton Arp showed evidence of an x-ray emitting filament extending from the quasars, back to the galaxy emitting the quasars. THAT is the evidence that the jets are hitting those electrons. Halton, if you're out there, I know those x-ray connections are not just "noise".

O.K., back to the density of plasma in the halo. Let's say the mainstream is about right that there is about 10 times as much dark matter as visible matter in a galaxy, and that Weninger is right that this is plasma. That sure sounds like there should be enough electrons out there to do some serious scattering, right? Remember though, the visible matter is contained in roughly a disk 100,000 ly wide by 1000 ly thick. The halo of dark matter(gravitationally segregated plasma) is more like a sphere with a radius of well OVER 100,000 ly ,with the electron density skewed proportionately to the outer portion of the halo. Look up the cross section for photons scattering off electrons if you want, and do the math. But as you can already see, light from a distant galaxy is not going to be significantly scattered before we see it.

celeste
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Joined: Mon Apr 11, 2011 7:41 pm
Location: Scottsdale, Arizona

Re: Electric Spheres

Unread post by celeste » Fri May 18, 2012 10:43 pm

Sorry for running on, but one more thing: Halton Arp suggests that quasars are sources of very high energy cosmic rays. Do you see why he must be right? If quasars are in fact points were electrons are piling up in a shock wave in front of those jets, then they provide the electric field to accelerate ions to very high energies . Again, I think this is so simple it must be right.

allynh
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Joined: Fri Aug 22, 2008 5:51 pm

Re: Electric Spheres

Unread post by allynh » Sat Apr 29, 2017 8:47 pm

The latest Space News video begins to answer my question.

Thanks...

The Electrical Birth, Life, and Death of Stars | Space News
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MU74kAmONQU

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