| Thread Closed |
How is molecular hydrogen detected? |
Share Thread | Thread Tools |
| Jul11-12, 10:00 PM | #69 |
|
|
How is molecular hydrogen detected?And it was published in A&A http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2012A%26A...537A..78B One bit of constructive criticism is that you *really* need to learn how to do basic library research. Once you have that one paper, you'll find a cluster of people that are working on Milne-Dirac universes. I got to that paper, by going to http://arxiv.org/ and typing in "Milne cosmology". It's a very good example of how to present a "nutty theory" that passed peer review. The fact that you can get the right baryon-acoustic oscillations with Milne-Dirac is a non-obvious and interesting result. Also, even if it's wrong, it's interesting. The situation is that in order to have a Milne universe, you have to have no gravity. You can get no gravity by either having an empty universe or by having a universe that is 50% antimatter in which the antimatter counteracts the gravity of the matter. Also, you have to read papers critically. The supernova data they cite is old and noisy, and more recent data move things away from the Milne baseline. That's what AEGIS is for. If we do the experiment and it turns out that anti-matter has gravitational repulsion, then people get free trips to Stockholm. There is the "magic wand" or "tooth fairy rule" of cosmology papers. In any paper, you are allowed one free wave of the magic wand. The problem with the Milne-Dirac papers is that they wave the magic wand twice. Once assuming that antimatter is repulsive and the other that assumes that somehow there are vast quantities of hidden antimatter in the universe. If AEGIS shows something unexpected, then you now have only one magic wand wave. |
| Jul11-12, 10:23 PM | #70 |
|
|
Also, there's nothing wrong with wishful thinking and emotions, but it's important to manage wishful thinking and emotions. The other thing is that the problem with Arp is that he didn't have a "portfolio" of nutty ideas. Roger Penrose is a crank on some things, but you can ignore his ideas on neuroscience and look only at his quasi-crystal stuff. For that matter, Albert Einstein and Issac Newton had some crazy ideas that didn't work out. The other thing is that there are a lot of scientists (probably most scientists) that are "closet cranks." Which is to say that they have crazy ideas, but if you argue with them, they'll tell that that yes I know this is crazy, and then smile and change the subject. The papers I linked on to Milne-Dirac are publishable because they have something *new*. It's not obvious that you can get baryon acoustic oscillations and the right helium abundances with Milne-Dirac, and that's a *new* and *original* result. The other thing is that peer review is a terrible process for getting feedback. Peer reviewers are editors, they aren't teachers. If a peer reviewer looks at your paper for ten seconds and thinks it's garbage, they'll just stamp reject without any comment, because they are busy and unpaid, and it's not their job to teach you astrophysics. |
| Jul11-12, 11:53 PM | #71 |
|
|
I agree, twofish. Most of the genius ideas posted on this site seem plagued by a shocking ignorance of math and fundamental physics.
|
| Jul11-12, 11:57 PM | #72 |
|
|
twofish-quant, thank you for your comments in post #70 above. "Crazy ideas" musn't be ignored without thorough consideration of their source. Since I am not a professional scientist your viewpoints are enlightening...one of the great benefits of PF! I certainly learned a lot by following the exchange between you and JDoolin!
|
| Jul12-12, 01:37 AM | #73 |
|
|
The reason I mention Roger Penrose is that when he is talking about neuroscience he really is a crank. However, curiously the things that make him a crank in one field makes him totally brilliant in another. If you hear him talk about neuroscience, you can tell it's the same person that is doing work in quasi-crystals. However, he got lucky that in one area, the data seemed to end working in his direction, and in another it hasn't. The thing about "crazy ideas" is that it's a matter of time allocation. OK, someone mentions a nutty idea. Now what? What exactly is it that you want me to do with it? One problem with cosmology is that there are realms in which it's not clear what is "crazy" and what itself. Once you get into the inflationary era, then it's not clear what's nutty and what isn't. However, one thing that I don't think that the general public doesn't quite appreciate is that most of cosmology happens in "non-crazy" areas. Popular works in cosmology play up the "weird physics" and often miss the point that most of cosmology takes place in situations where the physics isn't weird at all. For example, once you get past the very, very, very early universe, you are just talking about "gas and gravity." Some of the big mysteries involve things that are unlikely to involve any super-weird physics. Galaxy formation, and early star formation for example. |
| Jul12-12, 04:55 AM | #74 |
|
|
That was before I realized that Special Relativity and cosmological General Relativity were in direct conflict, and the FLRW metric assumes as one of its premise that the Lorentz Transformation equations are invalid at large distances.
But when Milne showed you that isotropy is possible without homogeneity, so long as you account for special relativity, then you change your story. Now, that is impossible because it doesn't fit with the FLRW metric. But yes, a lot of Gravitation, Relativity, and World Structure is devoted to explaining that argument. Explaining how and why Einstein and Eddington are wrong--that isotropy is indeed possible without homogeneity. And the premise on which the FLRW metric is based, is fundamentally flawed. If you would acknowledge that point, then you might begin to focus on my real argument instead of straw-men. |
| Jul12-12, 05:40 AM | #75 |
|
|
On the other hand, I have very much enjoyed reading "The Emperor's New Mind." All I know of Penrose's ideas of neuroscience are what I read in that book, so I may be unaware of exactly how nutty he is, but I didn't see anything in "The Emperor's New Mind" that was particularly nutty or controversial. In fact, as I recall, I was excited to find someone who essentially agreed with me. I think the main point that Penrose was making was that people have opinions, and computers don't. A computer is able to compute, but it is utterly unable to make a judgment of whether that information is interesting or the effort was worthwhile. Where do those opinions come from? It is doubtful that our opinions and emotions are going to be successfully emulated with a computer in their current form. I don't know what exactly your issue with Penrose is, but given your prediliction for building straw-men, I wonder whether you are arguing with Penrose, or a straw-man version of Penrose? I don't think that Penrose was wrong, but that Penrose was aware of something that perhaps you're not. That human-beings are opinion-generating engines. That's our function, to figure out what we value, and pursue it. Whether you agree with Penrose, or not, that that function derives from quantum mechanics, it actually relates to the argument that you were making earlier. Your argument was that if I believe something that the consensus does not believe then it is a waste of time to spend ten years of my life on it. That is your opinion. My opinion is that those ten years were not at all wasted. While it has been painful, humiliating, and humbling at times, I got a Masters degree in physics, and a Masters degree in mathematics during that time. I became gainfully employed as an adjunct professor. I have learned a lot about physics, mathematics, logic, and emotions during that time. I've learned over the years that my opinions are not something I'm stuck with, but nobody can change them for me, either. I have to take personal responsibility for my opinions; and Penrose, pointing out that my opinions may be somehow quantum mechanical in nature--might not be terribly useful in neuroscience, but it has been helpful in my own personal psychology. As an example, just six months ago, I realized that I was a victim of an opinion that I had--I completely lacked faith in other people. I had seen the evidence that they were continually disappointing me, never listening to me, and I had long accepted that they were going to continue to do so, and I might as well just accept it. But I decided that I was going to quantum-mechanically change that opinion, and believe that people are NOT going to disappoint me. It changes how I interact with them, and other people around me are starting to do things to impress me. You could do it now, if you would just acknowledge my point, that Milne's model really is isotropic and nonhomogeneous. And then if someone went out and actually read "Relativity, Gravitation, and World Structure" and went out and edited the Wikipedia article so that it wasn't full of lies and nonsense about Milne's model being a zero mass version of the FLRW metric, but is, in fact, an isotropic, but nonhomogeneous distribution--an exploding sphere of matter--that would also really impress me. It would be like a "Quantum change" or something. |
| Jul12-12, 06:22 AM | #76 |
|
|
I'm basically the idiot in the back of the room, when the teacher is doing the super-complicated equation and the only part of it that I understand is that 3+5=8 not 7. While everyone else is following along, figuring out all of the neat principles that are derived from assuming isotropy AND homogeneity, I just am too stubborn to go along with it. When people finally notice that the idiot in the back of the room is actually right, that the teacher made a typo at the beginning, it really doesn't mean the idiot is brilliant. It just means that the idiot was right. I really don't have a paper to write, and twofishquant is correct. I'm not a research scientist, and I certainly don't have anything *new* to say, based on new data. I don't read that much. And I don't know any of the unwritten rules of submitting an article. I just get stuck at the point where it stops making sense, and I can't read any further. I could happily prepare a series of lectures, if I had someone who wanted to listen, but I really can't prepare a paper to send to a group of people who really really REALLY don't want to hear what I have to say. |
| Jul12-12, 08:44 AM | #77 |
|
|
http://screencast.com/t/9WYFYl8F |
| Jul13-12, 01:35 AM | #78 |
|
|
I don't have any reason to dispute that isotropy is possible without homogenity, and that if you assume isotropy without homogenity, that you can get a metric that is different than FLRW. This is a well-defined mathematical question, and I have no reason to conclude that Milne got this wrong. So what? We *observe* that the universe is homogenous and isotropic, we then take these observations and create models that are consistent with these observations which gets us FLRW. It may indeed be *possible* for the universe to be non-isotropic. It's would also be *possible* for the earth to have two moons or for me to be drinking diet Pepsi instead of Coke right now. Lot's of things are *possible*. That's why you have to go out and see what is actually there. As a *theoretical* point, the Milne model is inconsistent with any gravity model that approximates Newtonian physics. Since we *observe* that Newtonian physics works in most situations (and we can define the situations in which it doesn't), this poses a big problem. The problem is that you are doing philosophy rather than physics. You are treating isotropy and homogenity as if they were mathematical axioms when they aren't. With physics the only arguments that matter are those that are grounded in empirical observation. You can convince me that if we assume X, we get the Milne model. That's not hard. The problem is getting to observation. We *observe* that the universe is homogenous and isotropy at large scales. That gets you to FLRW. If we observe something different, then we toss FLRW. |
| Jul13-12, 01:51 AM | #79 |
|
|
But for me, I want to do productive stuff. This means working on several things, so that if I "strike out" on one, I can get somewhere with another. It's not a matter of agreeing with consensus. It's a matter of agreeing with God. If God says that the universe does or does not work in a certain way, then no amount of effort is going to change that. Also it's important to be *original*. I spent eight years trying to get supernova to explode with convection and came to the conclusion that it couldn't be done. This is not a waste because it was *original* in 1998. Now if someone does exactly the same thing that I did, it would be a waste of time, because it wouldn't be *new*. The other fun stuff is to work on something for which there is no consensus. There is no consensus model on how supernova work, or for how black hole jets work, or for how galaxies formed. I like advancing the frontiers of knowledge. Sometimes it's something silly and trivial. You code a program one way, and you find that it doesn't work. That's "new knowledge". I can point to stuff that I know now that I didn't know a week ago, and that adds to humanities knowledge of the universe. So when someone does something and at the end of it, humanity learns nothing, I think that's a waste. Again this is a personal view. If you accept any sort of Newtonian-like universe, then Milne model=zero gravity. |
| Jul13-12, 02:12 AM | #80 |
|
|
Scientists *love* it when the universe throws people a surprise. If it turns out that the universe isn't decelerating you are talking about enough papers and grant to last the next 20 years. And then there are the big open questions now. How did galaxies form? We toss out all of the old equations and rewrite everything. How does this effect black holes? Heck, do black holes even exist. If you have a non-homogenous universe, and you end up near the center of that universe, then you need to figure out how you ended up there. If it turns out that we are in the center of an inhomogenity to one part in 10^-3, then you can say it's random. If you look at the universe and it turns out that you are at coordinate 0.000000000000000 then you really have something weird happening. Anytime you solve one mystery, you have a million new ones. If we establish that we live in the Milne universe, that's only the start of the mystery. The most important part of getting a Ph.D. is the defense. That's when you present your results to your dissertation committee and they try to tear you to shreds. It's intellectual cage fighting, and they'll only hand you a sheet of paper when you can show that you can defend yourself in the arena. |
| Jul13-12, 02:23 AM | #81 |
|
|
If you look hard, I'm pretty sure that there is something out there that presents a simple introduction to GR. Also, if you want to start thinking about homogenity https://telescoper.wordpress.com/201...ness-conundra/ Again, the assumptions of homogenity and isotropy are not mathematical axioms but rather working assumptions that seem to be accurate. |
| Jul13-12, 10:52 AM | #82 |
|
|
|
| Jul13-12, 11:34 AM | #83 |
|
|
There's two competing effects at the extreme periphery. You have higher density, but younger universe. The younger universe means we should have less galaxies. The higher density means we should have more galaxies. I would think we should expect to find, in this high density, low age region, a large number of supernovae, but very few fully formed galaxies. But at those distances, 10, 20, 30 billion light-years, we possibly can't see anything as dim as a galaxy anyway. This is why I'm so suspicious when you say that Milne's model is being tested with the data. You need to be able to point at something that tells me clearly that there is no increase in density at the extreme periphery of the visible universe, and I have strong doubts that we have observations that are that good. (This paragraph has been edited with Chronos' correction. Thanks, Chronos.) If I were to take a wild guess about what to expect from Milne's model, at the extreme periphery of the universe, I would expect there to be more Type II supernovae toward the edge of the universe, and fewer Type I supernovae. Based on my reading of an introductory astronomy book, it sounds like Type I supernovae come from white dwarfs collecting enough matter to reach critical mass for carbon-detonation, while Type II supernovae are the truly giant stars going supernova. Since the most distant regions are extremely young, the Type II supernovae would dominate, and the older Type I supernovae would be relatively less common. Also from Milne's Model, there should be a directional difference in the distribution of galaxies. I would expect an asymmetry in the distribution of galaxies that fairly precisely matched the asymmetry in the dipole anisotropy of the CMBR. Also from Milne's Model, if I am correct that there are secondary accelerations, there should be a local region where Hubble's constant is large and low variance, indicating projection from a more recent event, and a more distant region where Hubble's constant is small, and high variance, indicating an older part of the universe; a projection from a more ancient event. Now, if none of these expectations are happening, then perhaps we can reject Milne's model based on comparing hypotheses to data. But as long as Milne's model is being rejected because it is a zero-mass model, then we're not rejecting Milne's model. We're rejecting a straw-man. |
| Jul13-12, 02:18 PM | #84 |
|
|
I believe you had a dyslexic moment there, James. Type I supernova are classified as white dwarf detonations, Type II supernova are the ones resulting from core collapse of massive stars.
|
| Jul15-12, 06:33 AM | #85 |
|
|
|
| Thread Closed |
| Thread Tools | |
Similar Threads for: How is molecular hydrogen detected?
|
||||
| Thread | Forum | Replies | ||
| Formation of molecular hydrogen in HI clouds | Advanced Physics Homework | 0 | ||
| Atomic and Molecular Hydrogen | Chemistry | 3 | ||
| heat enthalpy of molecular hydrogen | Advanced Physics Homework | 0 | ||
| hydrogen molecular ion | Quantum Physics | 2 | ||