No GM, it was *YOUR* claim. How do you KNOW that no discharge processes are involved in solar flares? You've never even READ Alfven's book!
No. Regardless of your incessant and
dishonest effort to shift the burden of proof, and regardless of your temper tantrum, it was your claim that electrical discharges are involved in solar flares and CMEs. If you are now prepared to admit that you can't support that claim, do it. Until you can support it, it's reasonable to state that the truth of your claim has not been demonstrated, and it's reasonable to state that in the form of: There is no electrical discharge processes involved in solar filament eruptions and CMEs.
And I have provided you with ample evidence to support that position.
No evidence you've provided has shown that the solar atmosphere is anything other than a plasma. Plasma is a conductor. In order to have an electrical discharge you need an insulator to fail or break down. A discharge doesn't occur in a conductor. If you believe you can prove that there are electrical discharges in the conducting medium of a plasma it will require a complete rewrite of the physics of electricity and/or plasma. If you choose to undertake that task, don't forget to be thorough, objective, and quantitative. Include all the relevant math, you know, calculations with real numbers.
It's you that seem to believe yourself to be more important to MHD theory than Alfven, more important to solar physics that Bruce and Birkeland, etc. So far, all we know is that you made a claim and you have no idea if it's correct, in fact it is not correct. Instead of dealing with Bruce's material head on, you ignored it outright.
Show that the contemporary consensus position on the physics of electricity and the physics of plasma are so incorrect as to allow for an electrical discharge in a conducting medium. Until you can, it is reasonable to say that you have failed to support your claim, and it is reasonable to say that in the form of: There is no electrical discharge processes involved in solar filament eruptions and CMEs.
And you also ignored Dungey. Why? Let me guess? It doesn't jive with:
Solar science didn't stop advancing 50 years ago. The solar atmosphere is made up of a conducting medium. An electrical discharge requires an insulator. You have yet to demonstrate that electricity and/or plasma works differently on the Sun than it does everywhere else.
When did you intend to support your ridiculous claim with real evidence?
I'm not making a claim, your
dishonest effort to shift the burden of proof notwithstanding. You claim that CMEs and solar flares are, or are caused by, electrical discharges. Contemporary physics shows your claim is wrong. Your inability and/or lack of willingness to provide contemporary resources
and your lack of qualifications to understand the resources you do provide is noted. (See Reality Check's notes in the above posts.)
And still you're
dishonestly attempting to divert the subject away from the topic of this thread. You've made some relevant claims and they won't go away no matter how steadfast your ignorance. You may start with any of these you like, but the first couple seem most relevant...
- You have a quantitative objective method for "predicting" CMEs.
- Dark filament eruptions cause CMEs.
- There is no transition region in the Sun's atmosphere.
- Magnetic reconnection doesn't happen.
- Birkeland "predicted" solar wind and proposed it was caused by simple electricity.
- Birkeland developed a solar model that mathematically explained the Sun's density, material makeup, thermal characteristics, luminosity, and mechanical function.
- The folks who designed, built, launched, and operate the various solar satellites including GOES, Yohkoh, SOHO, Trace, RHESSI, STEREO, SDO, etc., don't understand solar physics as well as you do.
You may of course be honest and acknowledge that you're abandoning any or all of them, but continuing to ignore them is unscientific. Would Birkeland have pussied out if he wasn't able to support a claim? If Alfvén made a claim and wasn't able to support it, would he have mouthed off then slinked away? Or would they have just admitted that they were unable to support the claims?