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On Jul 4, 6:25 pm, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote:
On Wed, 04 Jul 2007 06:29:37 -0700, Jerry wrote: On Jul 4, 6:18 am, bz wrote: Last time I looked inside a laser, there was absolutely no sign of 'HW bunching'. Otherwise there would be terrible keying 'chirp' [frequency shift] {which would KILL gigabit data transfer over fiber}. Unfortunately, Henri would explain that away by claiming that the laser generates an "EM Control Frame" that forces light to travel at c with respect to the laser. Oh? Are you suggesting taht light does NOT travel at c wrt the laser? No, I am suggesting that incompressible sawblade photons are incompatible with the existence of femtosecond laser pulses. There is no way to shape them to fit within the pulse envelope. Your photon model is nonsense. Henri has an ad hoc kludge for everything, it seems. Provided he doesn't have to provide math or actually demonstrate his theory's predictive ability (beyond fitting a few luminosity curves), everything about his theory seems perfect to him. My computer does the maths....and generates more curves in a minute than DeSitter and Einstein could produce in a million years.. GIGO HWdaemons only seem to live in the space between galaxies, so there is no way the phenomina can be tested on earth or by sighting within our solar system. Henri once estimated that his "density threshold" might be around 10^-22 Torr. That implies that BaTh would be inoperative in interstellar space. Only the space between galaxies has so hard a vacuum. Yoiu must be good at making up hospital beds by now. Why don't you stick to the things you know something about and leave the brainwork to us experts? I recognize many forms of mental illness by now. Remember, I did a rotation in a psychiatric ward. Contradicting himself, Henri continues to apply BaTh theory to the "explanation" of variable star curves. It seems that being the author of the WDT bodge gives him the right to apply the bodge on an "as needed" basis. http://www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/group1.jpg The latest one is interesting. It models an tidally distored, egg shaped star to produce the presumed cepheid 'overtone' effect. Makes one rethink whether or not cepheids really DO go huff puff, eh? You STILL haven't provided evidence that you can simultaneously fit luminosity and radial velocity curves. From what I can see, your BaTh program STILL fails even the simplest fits, despite your addition of kludge after kludge. I now think they just orbit some dark matter, probably in tidal lock. So now you suggest that your dark companions are totally invisible except for gravitational effects? Perhaps they only live in the space around stars that do NOT have {semi} intellegent life on any of the planets. That must be it. Henri, I found another 'ad hoc fix' for you: it is the presence of intellegent LIFE that forces light to travel at c, where intellegent life is absent, then the ballistic theory of light can freely reign. Shades of John Wheeler! The Wilsonian version of IT FROM BIT??? My theory is now almost complete ...and is quite consistent. In your dreams... Jerry Henri Wilson's Faked Diploma http://mysite.verizon.net/cephalobus...ri_diploma.htm Henri Wilson's Use of Deceptive Language or, Would You Buy A Used Ballistic Theory From This Man? http://mysite.verizon.net/cephalobus..._deception.htm RT Aurigae versus Emission Theory or, Henri Wilson's Faked Program Output http://mysite.verizon.net/cephalobus...rt_aurigae.htm Henri Wilson Attempts to Rewrite the Historical Record http://mysite.verizon.net/cephalobus...ri_history.htm |
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On Thu, 05 Jul 2007 02:28:57 -0700, Jerry
wrote: On Jul 4, 6:25 pm, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote: On Wed, 04 Jul 2007 06:29:37 -0700, Jerry wrote: Unfortunately, Henri would explain that away by claiming that the laser generates an "EM Control Frame" that forces light to travel at c with respect to the laser. Oh? Are you suggesting taht light does NOT travel at c wrt the laser? No, I am suggesting that incompressible sawblade photons are incompatible with the existence of femtosecond laser pulses. There is no way to shape them to fit within the pulse envelope. Your photon model is nonsense. So what is YOUR model of a femtosecond photon? Henri has an ad hoc kludge for everything, it seems. Provided he doesn't have to provide math or actually demonstrate his theory's predictive ability (beyond fitting a few luminosity curves), everything about his theory seems perfect to him. My computer does the maths....and generates more curves in a minute than DeSitter and Einstein could produce in a million years.. GIGO I know you don't like it. Yoiu must be good at making up hospital beds by now. Why don't you stick to the things you know something about and leave the brainwork to us experts? I recognize many forms of mental illness by now. Remember, I did a rotation in a psychiatric ward. Remeber I have a psychology degree...so I can easily recognize your delusion of being a great physicist. Contradicting himself, Henri continues to apply BaTh theory to the "explanation" of variable star curves. It seems that being the author of the WDT bodge gives him the right to apply the bodge on an "as needed" basis. http://www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/group1.jpg The latest one is interesting. It models an tidally distored, egg shaped star to produce the presumed cepheid 'overtone' effect. Makes one rethink whether or not cepheids really DO go huff puff, eh? You STILL haven't provided evidence that you can simultaneously fit luminosity and radial velocity curves. I have. You didn't join my conversations with George. From what I can see, your BaTh program STILL fails even the simplest fits, despite your addition of kludge after kludge. http://www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/group1.jpg I might add that some of these take about two hours to match because I have to juggle about six parameter values in the process. The end result usually produces values accurate to within about 1%. I now think they just orbit some dark matter, probably in tidal lock. So now you suggest that your dark companions are totally invisible except for gravitational effects? Relativists claim there is about four times as much dark matter as visible. I agree. ...and I have found what it is. Most variable stars are orbiting some kind of dark object. The plain fact is, there are far more cold objects throughout the universe than hot ones. Why shouldn't there be? Shades of John Wheeler! The Wilsonian version of IT FROM BIT??? My theory is now almost complete ...and is quite consistent. In your dreams... It will be published soon. Jerry www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/index.htm The difference between a preacher and a used car salesman is that the latter at least has a product to sell. |
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On Jul 5, 5:30 pm, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote:
On Thu, 05 Jul 2007 02:28:57 -0700, Jerry wrote: On Jul 4, 6:25 pm, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote: Oh? Are you suggesting taht light does NOT travel at c wrt the laser? No, I am suggesting that incompressible sawblade photons are incompatible with the existence of femtosecond laser pulses. There is no way to shape them to fit within the pulse envelope. Your photon model is nonsense. So what is YOUR model of a femtosecond photon? Understanding femtosecond pulses (or for that matter, any pulses at all) requires knowledge of a branch of mathematics of which you are not merely ignorant... it is a branch of mathematics for which you have expressed open contempt. George, bz, Jeff etc. etc. all understand this branch of mathematics. You do not. That's all the hint that I will give you. My computer does the maths....and generates more curves in a minute than DeSitter and Einstein could produce in a million years.. GIGO I know you don't like it. Yoiu must be good at making up hospital beds by now. Why don't you stick to the things you know something about and leave the brainwork to us experts? I recognize many forms of mental illness by now. Remember, I did a rotation in a psychiatric ward. Remeber I have a psychology degree...so I can easily recognize your delusion of being a great physicist. Who has delusions? I know perfectly well that I am merely an advanced amateur astronomer. You, on the other hand, rank yourself as undoubtedly the foremost physicist in the entire world, whose theories about light will overturn and revolutionize the last three centuries of physics. This despite the fact that you barely have any grasp of mathematics beyond basic algebra. http://www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/group1.jpg The latest one is interesting. It models an tidally distored, egg shaped star to produce the presumed cepheid 'overtone' effect. Makes one rethink whether or not cepheids really DO go huff puff, eh? You STILL haven't provided evidence that you can simultaneously fit luminosity and radial velocity curves. I have. You didn't join my conversations with George. ***** SHOW YOUR RADIAL VELOCITY FITS ***** You have not presented any satisfactory SIMULTANEOUS fits of luminosity and radial velocity for any star. BaTh has failed, failed, and failed again. From what I can see, your BaTh program STILL fails even the simplest fits, despite your addition of kludge after kludge. http://www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/group1.jpg I might add that some of these take about two hours to match because I have to juggle about six parameter values in the process. The end result usually produces values accurate to within about 1%. ***** WHERE ARE YOUR RADIAL VELOCITY CURVES? ***** I now think they just orbit some dark matter, probably in tidal lock. So now you suggest that your dark companions are totally invisible except for gravitational effects? Relativists claim there is about four times as much dark matter as visible. I agree. ...and I have found what it is. Most variable stars are orbiting some kind of dark object. The plain fact is, there are far more cold objects throughout the universe than hot ones. Why shouldn't there be? My theory is now almost complete ...and is quite consistent. In your dreams... It will be published soon. In the Journal of Irreproducible Results, perhaps? Naw, your theory doesn't even have the merit of being humorous... Jerry |
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On Thu, 05 Jul 2007 20:57:55 -0700, Jerry
wrote: On Jul 5, 5:30 pm, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote: On Thu, 05 Jul 2007 02:28:57 -0700, Jerry wrote: So what is YOUR model of a femtosecond photon? Understanding femtosecond pulses (or for that matter, any pulses at all) requires knowledge of a branch of mathematics of which you are not merely ignorant... it is a branch of mathematics for which you have expressed open contempt. In other words, you haven't a clue. George, bz, Jeff etc. etc. all understand this branch of mathematics. You do not. That's all the hint that I will give you. In other words, you haven't a clue. I recognize many forms of mental illness by now. Remember, I did a rotation in a psychiatric ward. Remeber I have a psychology degree...so I can easily recognize your delusion of being a great physicist. Who has delusions? I know perfectly well that I am merely an advanced amateur astronomer. Being starry-eyed doesn't make you an astronomer. You, on the other hand, rank yourself as undoubtedly the foremost physicist in the entire world, whose theories about light will overturn and revolutionize the last three centuries of physics. .....they certainly appear to do just that....But of course, I'm not the only one who thinks so. This despite the fact that you barely have any grasp of mathematics beyond basic algebra. What you believe doesn't worry me at all. You STILL haven't provided evidence that you can simultaneously fit luminosity and radial velocity curves. I have. You didn't join my conversations with George. ***** SHOW YOUR RADIAL VELOCITY FITS ***** You have not presented any satisfactory SIMULTANEOUS fits of luminosity and radial velocity for any star. http://www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/stupidjerry.jpg For single stars or well separated buinaries, the brightness and velocity curves will be virtually identical. The velocity curve might have considerably less variation than the brightness one. BaTh has failed, failed, and failed again. Desperate, desperate and desperate again! From what I can see, your BaTh program STILL fails even the simplest fits, despite your addition of kludge after kludge. http://www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/group1.jpg I might add that some of these take about two hours to match because I have to juggle about six parameter values in the process. The end result usually produces values accurate to within about 1%. ***** WHERE ARE YOUR RADIAL VELOCITY CURVES? ***** Do you mean the true ones or those based on observed grating diffraction angles? There's a big difference you know.....or maybe you wouldn't know... Relativists claim there is about four times as much dark matter as visible. I agree. ...and I have found what it is. Most variable stars are orbiting some kind of dark object. The plain fact is, there are far more cold objects throughout the universe than hot ones. Why shouldn't there be? Too hard for you, Jerry? My theory is now almost complete ...and is quite consistent. In your dreams... It will be published soon. In the Journal of Irreproducible Results, perhaps? Naw, your theory doesn't even have the merit of being humorous... Silly little girl.... Jerry www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/index.htm The difference between a preacher and a used car salesman is that the latter at least has a product to sell. |
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On Jul 6, 12:01 am, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote:
On Thu, 05 Jul 2007 20:57:55 -0700, Jerry wrote: On Jul 5, 5:30 pm, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote: So what is YOUR model of a femtosecond photon? Understanding femtosecond pulses (or for that matter, any pulses at all) requires knowledge of a branch of mathematics of which you are not merely ignorant... it is a branch of mathematics for which you have expressed open contempt. In other words, you haven't a clue. George, bz, Jeff etc. etc. all understand this branch of mathematics. You do not. That's all the hint that I will give you. In other words, you haven't a clue. You are welcome to believe whatever you want. Your total ignorance is evident to those who understand what I am referring to. In the mean time, you still have the MAJOR problem of how to cram your INCOMPRESSIBLE sawblades into a space less than one wavelength long. Remeber I have a psychology degree...so I can easily recognize your delusion of being a great physicist. Who has delusions? I know perfectly well that I am merely an advanced amateur astronomer. Being starry-eyed doesn't make you an astronomer. You, on the other hand, rank yourself as undoubtedly the foremost physicist in the entire world, whose theories about light will overturn and revolutionize the last three centuries of physics. ....they certainly appear to do just that.... But of course, I'm not the only one who thinks so. Who besides yourself ascribes any validity to your imaginings? Even your former buddy Androcles believes that you have gone off the deep end. This despite the fact that you barely have any grasp of mathematics beyond basic algebra. What you believe doesn't worry me at all. You have given plenty of evidence for my assertion. I have. You didn't join my conversations with George. ***** SHOW YOUR RADIAL VELOCITY FITS ***** You have not presented any satisfactory SIMULTANEOUS fits of luminosity and radial velocity for any star. http://www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/stupidjerry.jpg Pathetic. That is not -your- curve fit, and the illustration is merely an APPROXIMATION to the observed relationship between luminosity and radial velocity. In reality, Cepheid luminosity and radial velocity curves show wavelength dependent phase lags. Check any REAL data on this. Let's start with RT Aurigae http://mysite.verizon.net/cephalobus...rt_aurigae.htm For single stars or well separated buinaries, the brightness and velocity curves will be virtually identical. The velocity curve might have considerably less variation than the brightness one. Huh? Stating that a velocity curve measured in km/s has "less" variation than a luminosity curve measured in magnitude units is comparing apples versus oranges. BaTh has failed, failed, and failed again. Desperate, desperate and desperate again! No, merely stating the truth. http://www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/group1.jpg These are all luminosity curves. Not one attempts a simultaneous fit of luminosity -and- radial velocity curves to observed data. I might add that some of these take about two hours to match because I have to juggle about six parameter values in the process. This shows your lack of knowledge of multivariable regression analysis. Juggling six parameter values, hmmm... Is that why you can fit .wav file outputs so well? You've put together a general curve fitting program, capable of matching flute sounds as well as Cepheids. The end result usually produces values accurate to within about 1%. ***** WHERE ARE YOUR RADIAL VELOCITY CURVES? ***** Do you mean the true ones or those based on observed grating diffraction angles? There's a big difference you know..... or maybe you wouldn't know... You need to be able to match observed data. You haven't matched observed data. BaTh has failed. Relativists claim there is about four times as much dark matter as visible. I agree. ...and I have found what it is. Most variable stars are orbiting some kind of dark object. The plain fact is, there are far more cold objects throughout the universe than hot ones. Why shouldn't there be? Too hard for you, Jerry? No, it is just that the observed evidence is not consistent with dark matter being in the form of compact objects. Do a bit of research on the topic, will you? Nah, you won't... It will be published soon. In the Journal of Irreproducible Results, perhaps? Naw, your theory doesn't even have the merit of being humorous... Silly little girl.... I've found a WONDERFUL illustration of your theory: http://www.jir.com/graph_contest/index.html#MoreGraphs Jerry Henri Wilson's Faked Diploma http://mysite.verizon.net/cephalobus...ri_diploma.htm Henri Wilson's Use of Deceptive Language or, Would You Buy A Used Ballistic Theory From This Man? http://mysite.verizon.net/cephalobus..._deception.htm RT Aurigae versus Emission Theory or, Henri Wilson's Faked Program Output http://mysite.verizon.net/cephalobus...rt_aurigae.htm Henri Wilson Attempts to Rewrite the Historical Record http://mysite.verizon.net/cephalobus...ri_history.htm |
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On Fri, 06 Jul 2007 04:43:47 -0700, Jerry
wrote: On Jul 6, 12:01 am, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote: On Thu, 05 Jul 2007 20:57:55 -0700, Jerry wrote: In other words, you haven't a clue. George, bz, Jeff etc. etc. all understand this branch of mathematics. You do not. That's all the hint that I will give you. In other words, you haven't a clue. You are welcome to believe whatever you want. Your total ignorance is evident to those who understand what I am referring to. In the mean time, you still have the MAJOR problem of how to cram your INCOMPRESSIBLE sawblades into a space less than one wavelength long. YOU and fellow relativists still have the major problem of showing how all the starlight in the universe miraculously travels towards our little planet at precisely 'c', simply because of an ancient religious belief which proclaims Earth as the centre of the universe. You, on the other hand, rank yourself as undoubtedly the foremost physicist in the entire world, whose theories about light will overturn and revolutionize the last three centuries of physics. ....they certainly appear to do just that.... But of course, I'm not the only one who thinks so. Who besides yourself ascribes any validity to your imaginings? Even your former buddy Androcles believes that you have gone off the deep end. If somebody like Androcles ever regarded me as normal I would be extremely concerned. This despite the fact that you barely have any grasp of mathematics beyond basic algebra. What you believe doesn't worry me at all. You have given plenty of evidence for my assertion. .......says the bedpan expert I have. You didn't join my conversations with George. ***** SHOW YOUR RADIAL VELOCITY FITS ***** You have not presented any satisfactory SIMULTANEOUS fits of luminosity and radial velocity for any star. http://www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/stupidjerry.jpg Pathetic. Then write to hte authors and tell them so. That is not -your- curve fit, and the illustration is merely an APPROXIMATION to the observed relationship between luminosity and radial velocity. In reality, Cepheid luminosity and radial velocity curves show wavelength dependent phase lags. Check any REAL data on this. Let's start with RT Aurigae http://mysite.verizon.net/cephalobus...rt_aurigae.htm That's right. Such phase differences are fully explained by my 'control sphere' model. It depends on the ratio of VDoppler to ADoppler that emerges from the region of the star. The presense of a companion star will invariably allow some VDoppler to get through and cause a phase difference. For single stars or well separated buinaries, the brightness and velocity curves will be virtually identical. The velocity curve might have considerably less variation than the brightness one. Huh? Stating that a velocity curve measured in km/s has "less" variation than a luminosity curve measured in magnitude units is comparing apples versus oranges. I said 'less variation'. You'll never make it in medicine if you can't read properly. BaTh has failed, failed, and failed again. Desperate, desperate and desperate again! No, merely stating the truth. http://www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/group1.jpg These are all luminosity curves. Not one attempts a simultaneous fit of luminosity -and- radial velocity curves to observed data. That has been done. I might add that some of these take about two hours to match because I have to juggle about six parameter values in the process. This shows your lack of knowledge of multivariable regression analysis. Juggling six parameter values, hmmm... Is that why you can fit .wav file outputs so well? You've put together a general curve fitting program, capable of matching flute sounds as well as Cepheids. .......silly girl.... The program can only produce a very narrow range of curve shapes. Don't you consider it a little more than coincidence that most star curves also fit this range? The end result usually produces values accurate to within about 1%. ***** WHERE ARE YOUR RADIAL VELOCITY CURVES? ***** Do you mean the true ones or those based on observed grating diffraction angles? There's a big difference you know..... or maybe you wouldn't know... You need to be able to match observed data. You haven't matched observed data. BaTh has failed. The BaTh have succeeded well and truly...but it is far too complicated for you to understand. Relativists claim there is about four times as much dark matter as visible. I agree. ...and I have found what it is. Most variable stars are orbiting some kind of dark object. The plain fact is, there are far more cold objects throughout the universe than hot ones. Why shouldn't there be? Too hard for you, Jerry? No, it is just that the observed evidence is not consistent with dark matter being in the form of compact objects. Do a bit of research on the topic, will you? Nah, you won't... I wont.... because what you just claimed is plain nonsense. It will be published soon. In the Journal of Irreproducible Results, perhaps? Naw, your theory doesn't even have the merit of being humorous... Silly little girl.... I've found a WONDERFUL illustration of your theory: http://www.jir.com/graph_contest/index.html#MoreGraphs Is this what med students do all day? Jerry www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/index.htm The difference between a preacher and a used car salesman is that the latter at least has a product to sell. |
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![]() "Henri Wilson" HW@.... wrote in message ... On Tue, 03 Jul 2007 02:31:52 -0700, George Dishman wrote: On 3 Jul, 03:22, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote: On Mon, 02 Jul 2007 06:48:25 -0700, George Dishman wrote: Of course they are, the same equations apply. Multiplication is associative so modulating white light by a sine wave is exactly the same as modulating a sine wave carrier with a white noise signal - e.g. voice on AM. voice is not white noise George. Aspirates henry, but stop changing the subject, it should be obvious that they are as easily definable mathematically as conventional sidebands on an AM radio. Not very convincing George. It's called the "Commutative Law" in maths, a*b = b*a. Yes, as I said above, both apply and ADoppler is the extra factor beyond VDoppler that only appears in ballisitic theory. ADoppler is usually by far the dominant factor. Forget the mantra Henry and think. We have proved there is no ADoppler on pulsars and for contact binaries where the speeds are the highest and ADoppler should show up. Both have a fixed 'sphere' around them. All light leaves at about the same speed, c wrt the barycentre of the pair. Look at your Basic program again, you insisted the spheres were separate and moving in the bottom picture. If you look at the radius curves, there is no ADoppler on Cepheids either, so no, it is not "usually .. dominant", it is non-existent in every case we have examined. Where did you get that idea? Mental block Henry, I've told you dozens of times. That's OK, you need to match the radius curve for this example. That will resolve whether there is any ADoppler effect or if it is only VDoppler. VDoppler can't produce large magnitude changes like these. I know, ballistic theory cannot explain Cepheid curves. Quite wrong George. Fact Henry, though apparently your inability to accept you have been in error prevents you realising it. I have explained all that I have tried to match. Nope, I have ignored that as we agreed some weeks ago. I am simply differentiating the radius to get the velocity and then the acceleration. You aren't using it as an indicator of bunching (or photon density). Yes I am, I am comparing it against the luminosity curve which is a direct count of photons in a given band. You clearly don't understand the principle involved. Mental problems again? Remember I had to write the BaTh equation for speed equalisation for you, I understand the principles far better than you. which IS velocity dependent....h.(c+v)/lambda. You are completely ignoring the principle factor involved, which is 'number of photons arriving per second'. On the contrary, that is the only factor I am considering at the moment. You aren't considering the bunching effect due to velocity differences. Yes I am, that is the ADoppler part which should be proportional to the top of my three plots, but the curve shape is completely wrong - that shows there is no ADoppler. George, think about this: A B C 1__2___3____4_____5______6____-v,a D An accelerating source emits pulses of light at equal time intervals at the points shown. The speed of each pulse is c wrt its source. You can easily imagine how the pulses bunch together as they approach the three points A, B, C and D. I think ".. the three points A, B, C and D." have been messed up by Usenet. Just consider point D, we are only interested in the radial components and any transverse component of the speed affects the radial only via Pythagoras as a second order speed term so changes the result by less than one part per million. You can see that the pulse density distribution at A, B, C and D can be manipulated by curving the path of the source. Nothing you are saying is relevant to this process. Think again. Consider points 1 through 6 as the surface of the star as it expands away from the centre. The photon rates you will calculate will depend on the speed and acceleration of the surface, both of which can be found by differentiating the radius. That's a good one George.... It's your own Henry, do the sums. f'=f(c+v)/c OK, now apply that to the carrier and sideband frequencies independently. Then inverse transform the three to get the received waveform. What speed does the modulation travel at? Show your working ;-) I don't see the point. What are you getting at. Yet again Henry, consideration of sidebands allows you to calculate the Doppler shift directly from the speed of modulating pulses hence a speed of c+v determines the shift. You don't have a model for individual photons. I don't need a model, I just need to know that they deflect by the same angle as the classical wave on hitting a grating which is proved by the photomultiplier experiment. Again this is something I have pointed out dozens of times. When are you going to stop trying to change the subject and address the proof? Again, that is true only if the speed equalisation distance is large so that it travels a long way through the ISM at variable speed. The same is true without the sphere if the light so again it still appears redundant. NO NO NO!!!!!. You are quite wrong there George. The sphere effectively becomes the source. If it moves with the star, then the original c+v relationship with Earth holds. Exactly, so what is the difference from saying it leaves the star at c+v? But George, if TWO stars are in close orbit, the common sphere remains vurtually at rest wrt both. You spent a long time telling me there were two spheres and each moved with its parent star. You lost the plot somewhere. No I haven't. The spheres aren't rigid steel balls.... they behave more like a gas and their effect probably drops off with an inverse square law. Go back and read your posts again. Their contributions are additive so two equally sized orbiting stars will end up with an almost steady sphere with a couple of small circulating bumps.. ALL light leaves that sphere at about c wrt the sphere and NOT at c wrt each star. There is very little if any 'c+v'. The light from both leaves at c/n...but is wavelength shifted dring the unification process. Surely you can see this. Yep, but the same is true if the light changes to speed c at surface of the heliopause as it moves into the ISM so what does the sphere do? I just explained. What you said still doesn't have any effect. Perhaps you should calculate the result before guessing any more. You are right, I can't see why you think it makes any difference. see above. It makes a difference in cases like contact binaries. You said the sphere moved with the star. For a single star or a well separated pair, that is true. The sphere makes little or no difference to the speed of light leaving the system. Have a look at your Basic animation, the bottom diagram. ... what I said was that we know there are no errors in the derivation of the predicted angle from the respective theories and they give different answers. Ther is an optical lens effect anyway. That's what we are talking about, effectively Newton predicts twice the focal length for a given mass. I meant an atmospheric lens as well as the gravitational one. That doesn't come into the maths of GR or Newton, they give different predictions. I say much of the bending is optical rather than gravitational. Nope, it's less than a millionth of the gravitational bend (from memory, Craig Markwardt posted the details about a year or more ago in reply to Sean). You can easily separate the effects since the optical is frequency dependent while gravitational is not. I say that my 'spheres' also bend light. I repeat, I suggest you go and look ;-) I have .http://www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/stupidjerry.jpg is typical It doesn't show a radius curve. Why should it? You have lost the plot Henry, the conversation is about comparing the first and second derivatives of the radius to the luminosity to find out whether ballistic theory says it is VDoppler or ADoppler. It shows typically observed cepheid brightness curves. You are missing the whole point. You are becoming quite clueless George. Since you can't even work out what was being calculated, it is you who needs the clue - see above. George, I'll let the computer calculatebthe bunching. Let me give you the clue again - we were talking about differentiating the radius to get the radial velocity. You have wandered off on all sorts of tangents. No, YOU have.... Exactly, so stop trying to change the subject. because you are starting to realise that I'm right. ROFL, Henry ballistic theory gets _every_ prediction wrong unless it the source is at rest. You claimed that Cepheid luminosity variation was produced by ADoppler so I have pointed out that is not true because the curve matches the shape of the velocity, not the acceleration of the surface. As you of course realise, it is also three orders of magnitude too small but that's another matter, you said you were just matching the shapes and on that basis alone, only VDoppler gives a match. Again, You are becoming quite clueless George. Simple statement of fact Henry. Even Max Keon thinks you are losing it. Have a look at Max's first attempts at writing equations, he though he needed two, one for negative numbers and another for positive. Both took the square root of a square. He didn't know the associative, distributive and commutative laws until I pointed him at K12 pages. His maths is way behind yours! It could still be pretty good then. If you consider not knowing the level expected of a 12 year old "good" for an adult. The derivatives of the radius I am discussing are a couple of years ahead of that and you don't seem to be able to understand them even after I drew the plots for you. So find one that gets eclipsed at the fundamental. Statistically there must be many. I would like to find one. Exactly, without them you have a problem to explain. I don't have any problems. You do, there are thousands of Cepheids known so if they were binaries, many should be eclipsing but none are. I can simulate eccentricity and yaw angle to within a few percent. Not without a companion. Yes you do, you have nothing to compare against the radius. The radial velocity of the surface of a star that goes 'huff puff' is very similar to that of one in elliptical orbit. You think? So add the curve to your software and let's see it. That's how it works already. So add the curve and let's see what it predicts, what's your problem? Except for one thing George. VDoppler variations are minute. ADoppler can easily produce variations up to mag 4. However, differentiating the radius twice is nothing like the luminosity curve, it only matches the velocity. George, your own suggested method of calculating photon bunching matches just about any brightness curve. Don't try to change the subject Henry. I thought you would be impressed. You actually achieved something. You method is faster than mine even if it is considerably harder to program. It produces exactly the same results. Flattery won't work either. I repeat: However, differentiating the radius twice is nothing like the luminosity curve, it only matches the velocity. However, differentiating the radius twice is nothing like the luminosity curve, it only matches the velocity. Got it yet, or won't your mental state allow you to respond to that point? You are referring to the TRUE radius variation. It is the OBSERVED variation that matters. I am referring to the radius measured by means of the angle subtended by the star so I don't see what distinction you are drawing. OK, some people have claimed to have seen cepheids actually pulsating. For goodness sake Henry, what do you think we have been talking about for the last several weeks ????? The ESO page is exactly that measurement. There might be stars that actually do that and it might indeed be possible to see them....but I would be very suspicious.. Welcome to the conversation. I don't think anyone has actuallyseen the radius pulsating. Yes they have: http://tinyurl.com/239mw6 The red dots with vertical error bars are the measured angular diameter in milli arc seconds. Multiply by the distance to get radius and differentiate to get surface velocity. Alternatively integrate the measured velocity curve obtained spectroscopically and you get the background smooth curve. That is what we have been talking about for a couple of weeks now so if you have finally grasped the plot, maybe you can say something sensible about it this time. Go ahead then, add the radial distance curve, match it to the radius curve for L Car and "let your program provide the answers". Again, all you are considering is the h.c/lambda energy effect.....not the 'photon density' one. Nope, you are lost entirely. I am discussing the measured luminosity and CCD detectors are photon counters, not sensitive to the energy. None of this discussion has been related to photon energy at any point. Just let the computer do the sums and produce the curves George. My program is corrrect. ROFL, I have pointed out the error in it many, many times. There is no error. Even your own suggested method produces the right answers. Sure, but you only use that method on one curve when it applies to both, your "measured velocity" curve is wrong. Incidentally, I have now included the effects of tidal bulges and have found that their effects are very similar to those of a first overtone. I have matched some brightness curves very closely. Worthless until you match the radius at the same time, or find an eclipser so you can match the phase, As you admitted, you can just as easily match a curve with VDoppler as with ADoppler George, for most 'cepheids' the radius is constant. Nope, the ESO chart for L Car is how a typical Cepheid behaves. Note also, if you differentiate the radius, you get the speed of the surface relative to the barycentre of the star. Subtract that from the observed velocity curve and you get the velocity of the barycentre and guess what, since they are the same, there is no observed motion of the barycentre at the luminosity period. Most cepheids are merely stars in orbit around something dark. Many are egg shaped, due to tidal effects. If you want anyone to believe a simple binary system has been mistaken for a variable-radius Cepheid then you will need to show a discrepancy between the derivative of the angular radius and the spectroscopic velocity. There is none for L Car and no reason to think it isn't entirely typical. George |
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![]() "Henri Wilson" HW@.... wrote in message ... On Tue, 03 Jul 2007 01:59:47 -0700, George Dishman wrote: On 3 Jul, 03:28, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote: On Mon, 02 Jul 2007 00:22:11 -0700, George Dishman wrote: On 2 Jul, 01:27, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote: On Sun, 1 Jul 2007 13:13:50 +0100, "George Dishman" wrote: There is a single value in the Excel sheet I used to produce it that defines the width of the raised cosine as a fraction of the period. It would be simple to increase that a bit but it won't change the basic shapes which are produced so I don't see any point in spending the time to do that, use your imagination. Barring the rounded edges, the acceleration is rectangular, the velocity is a sawtooth and the radius is two quadratics. Your acceleration curve has an exaggerated length of time during which acceleration is constant....it isn't dead constant either. Indeed, but I always said it was merely illustrative and the key point here is that real _luminosity_ curves show a steady decline over a signidficant part of the cycle, they don't show the near constant values of the acceleration curve. Ah, I see your problem. You aren't taking account of the sequential emission delays between the 'pulses'. That is fundamental to the bunching calculations. You are assuming they are all emitted at the same instant. Where did you get that daft idea? In fact there is a small "error" in that I am assuming the time of arrival is similarly spcaed to the time of departure but that is correct if the effect is VDoppler only. What the hell are you talking about? I am simply pointing that I have _obviously_ taken account of the aspect that you said I had missed. If there weren't "sequential emission delays between the 'pulses'" then the _transmitted_ frequency would be infinite. It is only correct if one assumes Einstein's second postulate. Garbage, zero time between pulses gives infinite frequency regardless of speed. I guess you have some point you are trying to make but you need try to sort out what you are saying if it is to be understandable. For the ADoppler case, it would have the effect of distorting the X scale of the plot but not the Y scale, so it would only change the mark:space ratio of the rectangular curve which is arbitrary in the illustrative curve anyway. George, you seem to have completely lost it. Racing cars could never overtake each other if you had your way. Consider two pulses of light emitted from an orbiting source. The second is emitted a short time after the first but is moving faster. What happens George? The second eventually catches the first, of course. Of course, but also if they are both emitted while the source is moving towards the observer, the pair arrive earlier at their destination than pulses emitted at the same time but from a source at rest wrt the barycentre. That is the only effect I have omitted since the pulse widthis arbitrary anyway and it is only an illustration, not a simulation. It so happens that the shape of some elliptical orbits in particular is such that pulses emitted at regular interval from 'concave' sections bunch together whilst those emitted from the convex, move apart. There are sections from which light emitted sequentially over a certain time interval will arrive at an observer over a much shorter time interval. An observer will see this as large brightness increase. Yes, and that is what I have been discussing all along. But then the radius would be the second integral of the luminosity curve, not the first integral, and that doesn't match observation. Observation is about photon density, not individual photon energy. Yes, and the photon density measured as the luminosity is what I am comparing. It matches the sawtooth velocity curve far better than the rectangular acceleration. Let's be clear Henry, according to BaTh, the photon arrival rate should be the product of the emission rate, the VDoppler and the ADoppler factors. VDoppler depends on the velocity curve only but ADoppler depends on the acceleration and also the speed equalisation distance. Comparing the luminosity with the derivatives of the actual radius curve shows that the speed equalisation must be very short leaving VDoppler as the dominant effect. Now include the emission time delay. It is already included. No you haven't. The frequency is not infinite, it is included. Get it now, George? Nothing you have said is at odds with my point, but you seem to be grasping it a bit better now. You still have some way to go though. You might understand now. The only thing I don't understand is why you are having so much difficulty following what is essentially a very simple argument. I agree it is fairly simple. Why can't you understand it. Obviously I do, or the transmitted frequency would be infinite. Where do you get the bizarre idea that I have not taken it into account? To summarise - the time between pulses (or wavecrest emissions) is non-zero. During that time the source moves some distance towards or away from the observer. That leads to the VDoppler term, (1+v/c). In addition the speed for one pulse may differ from the previous which leads to the ADoppler term, 1/(1-Ra/c^2). The distance moved and the difference in speed also affect the time of arrival of each wavecrest which slightly distorts the resulting curves. So what do you think I have missed? George |
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![]() "bz" wrote in message 98.139... George Dishman wrote in oups.com: On 3 Jul, 13:19, bz wrote: HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote in news:rmcj83puhpk8l09pclb7ubl18ieb5khjcm@ 4ax.com: Ah, I see your problem. You aren't taking account of the sequential emission delays between the 'pulses'. That is fundamental to the bunching calculations. You are assuming they are all emitted at the same instant. you do realize that, for the velocities involved in your typical variable star, the delta v (change in velocity of the emission source) between the 'front end' and the 'back end' of the photon, during the time it takes to emit a photon, is essentially zero, don't you? [this is true whether one considers the photon length to be the same as the wave length or millions of wavelengths.] You have to remember Henry is using a classical concept for a photon, so it is the latter "millions of wavelengths" definition you have to use. The change of launch speed between the ends is therefore just the time taken multiplied by the average acceleration over those cycles. That blows Henry's model out of the water since the spectral shift has to match the 'photon bunching' because the mechanism that bunches phtotons also bunches the cycles within a photon by the same factor. The correspondence is that an orbital speed of 300km/s (fastest contact binary) should give a luminosity variation of just +/- 0.001 magnitudes. Kind of 'lost in the noise', right? Exactly. It's surprising that people like Sekerin who pushed this years ago didn't see that problem. Blows holes in his concrete boat. Not concrete, it has enough holes to be chicken wire. That's why Henry added another ad hoc bodge to the theory of photons being incompresible, but that doesn't work when you consider a simple pulse-modulated monochromatic source. Last time I looked inside a laser, there was absolutely no sign of 'HW bunching'. Otherwise there would be terrible keying 'chirp' [frequency shift] {which would KILL gigabit data transfer over fiber}. The way he looks at it, you would need to accelerate the whole laser to get bunching. An example might be a natural maser in a stellar atmosphere of it was part of a binary system. Sadly Henry doesn't know enough about RF or audio to follow that argument and ended up going off on tangents about white light, but the evidence is still there. HWdaemons only seem to live in the space between galaxies, so there is no way the phenomina can be tested on earth or by sighting within our solar system. Since any refractive index sets the speed to c/n relative to the material, it would be limited to regions where the density is too low to get a dispersion measure. That rules out anything in our galaxy. ... where intellegent life is absent, then the ballistic theory of light can freely reign. I would agree with that, though not for technical reasons. George |
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![]() "Jerry" wrote in message ups.com... On Jul 5, 5:30 pm, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote: On Thu, 05 Jul 2007 02:28:57 -0700, Jerry wrote: On Jul 4, 6:25 pm, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote: .... http://www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/group1.jpg The latest one is interesting. It models an tidally distored, egg shaped star to produce the presumed cepheid 'overtone' effect. Makes one rethink whether or not cepheids really DO go huff puff, eh? You STILL haven't provided evidence that you can simultaneously fit luminosity and radial velocity curves. I have. You didn't join my conversations with George. ***** SHOW YOUR RADIAL VELOCITY FITS ***** Not just that Jerry since there is no way to distinguish the VDoppler and ADoppler terms from just velocity and luminosity, what he needs to do is show that he can fit this curve for radius: http://tinyurl.com/239mw6 And from that deduce whether the luminosity matches the velocity or the acceleration. You have not presented any satisfactory SIMULTANEOUS fits of luminosity and radial velocity for any star. He won't ever do it as it proves his claim regarding Cepheids to be false: he _can_ get a rough fit of the luminosity to the velocity but not to the acceleration which is what he is currently saying is the cause. George |
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