Just wow! The idea proven here, more than a theory, that pulsars are not rotating stars but are actually due to a build up of particles in a 'confined' area of a magnetic bowl, whose particles then flip polarity as the particles build up and flow down towards the taper of the bowl, then are ejected out the bottom in a smaller stream (the 'choke' ring) where the polarity then attracts an opposing charge! So particles go in the top of the bowl positively charged, build and build until they energetically start moving down the bowl, then flip to negative polarity at the collar of the bowl, and then choke down into a stream out the bottom, where attract positive particles. Many of the nebulas apparently follow this bowl-shaped pattern including the nebular remnants left over from star burts or novas. This guy has got a spot-on match with the vacuum experiments and the visible nebula objects. Fantastic vid!
Why bowl shapes and what other shapes form between two opposing magnetic charges? The 'bowl' is shown in the comparisons with known nebula pics, as a lower portion of a torus, although maybe they can form as an upside down bowl, or top of a torus?
How are the bowl shapes formed in the first place? Which formed first, the confinement ring or the bowl? As particles are compressed together, in a spherical shape, do the magnetic bowl 'shoulders' form underneath them, allowing more 'containment' of particles building up between them, to form a bowl?
Also the idea that galaxies might be compressed matter, formed as a flat ring, between opposing polarities of two (gigantic) magnetized bowl shapes or areas in space, given that the bowls confine particles under them (between opposiong magnetic fields) is so descriptive, it gives one a taste of what is must be like to understand why the visible universe looks the way it does. That La Point is proving these theories in a lab is very cool.
Gee, particle physics is fun! Too bad these things aren't taught to children. Instead of encouraging childlike fantasies we could be opening their eyes to the universe around them and a love of human and non-human physicality. I read about someone who made a note about improving on human abilities, that it would be very cool for humans to be able to see some of the other wavelengths, as though having that ability in itself might be very enlightening. I say not necessarily will extra-sensory information be enlightening or act as a cohesive force among humans, unless the beauty of that information is respected and held in high value over the reptilian brain's need to smash things! La Point is definitely adding another dimension to what we are seeing in plasma shapes in space, that we wouldn't be seeing if we had not developed the different types of spectral photography and fake color to define the gas makeup of objects.
Thanks for the vid and view- :)
|
|