Objects do not "move" in inflationary theory, depending on how you define "move". We don't know what the mechanism for the cosmological constant is, yet you look at that and say we think it must be "magic"! Strawman much?
Evidently you missed my point, so let me try to clarify.
[astro-ph/0601171] Is space really expanding? A counterexample
It's not *certain* that "space" needs to do any magic expansion tricks to explain photon redshift in an expanding universe. Mind you, you'd still have to ignore the laws of plasma physics and pretend that no amount of plasma redshift occurs in space to accept this idea, but I personally am open to and would personally accept Michal's explanation of an "expansion" theory. As long as you're not claiming that "space" does magic expanding tricks, I'm open to an expanding universe.
What I will *not* accept are "magical" space expansion claims since nothing like that has ever, or could ever be demonstrated in a lab. It's a "sky entity" claim, that again simply ignores all the mass in space in the form of plasma that would actually prohibit it from occurring anywhere in space.
Actually, no, I know of *at least* four known mechanisms, and I'm pretty sure they *all* apply somewhere in space. I am intentionally not trying to "dumb it down" to a single form of plasma redshift, but rather I'm being inclusive of them all, and any that might be found in the future, like Holushko. That's really why I like his approach over any other. He intentionally uses a "generic" model that is meant to be *inclusive*, not exclusive, of all types of plasma redshift. IMO that is the only logical approach.You don't know what the electron-photon interaction is in your theory, yet you're entirely ok with that gap.
Sorry, but when you've been virtually lynched a few times by astronomers for your "heresy" of daring to present empirical physical alternatives, one starts to become a tad jaded over time. I'm sorry if my preference for empirical physics is offensive to your personal belief systems as it relates to cosmology theory. I'm also sorry if my personal preference for empirical physics is offensive to your personal belief system as it relates to evolutionary theory as well (I'm a big fan of EV theory myself). I can't help the fact that others are offended by my preference for physics. That's just the way it goes IMO.Not only are you insulting in your choice of words - some kind of inferiority complex perhaps - but you then accuse others of holding double standards.
I'm simply pointing out to you that Ned's website is a decade old and stuck in the past. It's not like the PC/EU community has not addressed all of Ned's claims and debunked all of Ned's claims. There Ned's page sits today however, never updated, never brought into the 21st century, and there is every astronomer today, acting like Lerner's work still doesn't exist today, that Holushko and Brynjolfsson never addressed the supernova data! Holy stuck in the past denial process!You complain about appeals to authority...and then appeal to that which you hold as authority (be it Brynjolfsson, Lerner, Holusko, or Alfven as you do here). Pot, meet kettle.
I don't just appeal to Chen's work. I appeal to all work on all forms of plasma redshift. Chen's work is simply the *forth* type of plasma redshift that the mainstream has not addressed, whereas it has been addressed in the EU/PC community by Ashmore and others! As long as the mainstream remains stuck in 1986, prior to Alfven's double layer paper that ties the E and B orientations of plasma physics together, and they refuse to incorporate various forms of plasma redshift observed in the lab over the past three decades, they will forever be playing with a "toy" version of plasma physics theory!I've lost count of the number of times you've appealed to Chen's paper, knowing full well the limitation that it was on a tiny scale in carbon nanotubes as opposed to the plasma one might find in space.
It has! Holushko's generic model of plasma redshift has been verified in the lab *at least* four times so far, and potentially several more forms may exist that we have yet to discover. Holushko's model is *inclusive* not exclusive, so it enjoys four "validations" thus far. Holushko's model now enjoys support from Compton redshift, Stark redshift, the Wolf effect, and what Chen et all called "plasma redshift". How much more validation for a generic plasma redshift/tired light approach would you like? Holushko even offers a free download of the C# code that he used to test his model, right down to the spectral aging characteristics. What more can a single guy do to earn himself a Nobel Prize in astronomy anyway other than to explain the process through empirical physics? Does the mainstream recognize his work? Of course not. They hand out prizes on "dark energy" and can't even name a source.But no...you're entirely happy to make the sweeping statement that your cosmological theory has been demonstrated "in the lab".
Fortunately you and I don't personally need to do that since Holushko and Ashmore have already done that for us. Did you not read their papers?You've not attempted to replicate the work, scale it up, or empirically test the implications that you have.
You again seem to believe it's a "one or nothing" thing. It's not. All forms of plasma redshift are likely to occur *somewhere* in space. Holushko's model is a "generic" model that is simply applied to the redshift process *in general*. I'm sure that if we wish to include quasar behavior and high energy processes in general, we might be able to create more advanced models that "pick and choose" between various forms of plasma redshift to explain very specific events. Unfortunately that is beyond the current state of sophistication in *all* cosmology models.You've admitted the ac stark effect probably isn't the sole mechanism...but hello, that is what the Chen paper talks about! That is how they explain all their results!!
Holushko did it for me.Great. So why haven't you tested your theory empirically?
I've done that too:You said that it makes predictions about the time delay of high energy photons. Superb. I pointed out that you could easily test that by showing data from across the night sky of pinpoint events and seeing whether the time delay is essentially uniform dependent on distance (since the redshift we see is uniform and specially independent across the night sky).
UC Davis News & Information :: Gamma Ray Delay May Be Sign of 'New Physics'
No, I'm not suggesting what you're suggesting. I'm suggesting that there are wavelength specific delays and broadening effects that must be accounted for that mainstream theory is ignoring.Immediately you fall into a problem - the data from the Markarian cluster alone shows a wildly varying time delay, one that varies from seconds to hours, despite similar redshifts. Your explanation and citation of this paper relies wholly on the assumption that the photons were emitted more or less simultaneously at higher and lower energy levels. My explanation would be that emission was asynchronous - most likely due to varying electron injection levels (see Zheng/Zhang, 2011).
IMO you have physics standing on it's head. Plasma redshift has been tested "empirically" in the lab, complete with real control mechanisms. It's been demonstrated in four unique forms. It's been applied to space by Holushko and Ashmore and countless other authors since. The concept of plasma redshift has been an alternative to BB theory, and written about by astronomers since as far back as Hubble himself. Hubble wrote about *two* possibilities, not one!Why aren't you testing your idea empirically?
Oh, so Guth can do it, but nobody else can?The Markarian results were published before Ashmore published his paper, so his prediction was actually a postdiction.
I'm baffled as to why you haven't read Holushko's paper. I'm thinking at the moment you simply missed it. It may be buried in the thread somewhere. Here:That is fine and good provided you all go out and test it again! If you really believed in it you'd be all over this like a rash...here is a way to empirically show you might be right? I'm baffled as to why you (plural) don't.
http://vixra.org/pdf/1203.0062v1.pdf
Holushko took all that supernova data and plugged it into a 'generic' plasma redshift/tired light theory and he demonstrated that it matches all the supernova data. Ari did it too. Unless you can pick out a flaw in their research, it is irrational IMO for you to claim that these ideas were not "tested" in space. Since four forms of plasma redshift show up in the lab, Holushko's generic model now enjoys four forms of empirical support. If you don't read it, and respond logically to it, it's not my fault.
You're right, I don't know most of them. I know most of the "haters", and I know that most of them remain silent when the haters ignore the laws of physics during our debates. I'm not sure what to say about that other than the fact that it's a pity, and it's pity that the more moderate elements of mainstream cosmology do not rule the internet at mainstream websites. My experiences on the internet over the past 7 years have in fact left me a bit jaded and tired of the nonsense that passes for "science" in cosmology theory today. When they make blatant false claims about the capacity of their equipment, and the more moderate's in the industry do nothing to correct those mistakes, it really annoys me.(Snip generalized insulting rant about the competency of the mainstream, most of whom you don't know well enough to judge)
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