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nojocujo
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Guys this is from Yahoo Groups and the two seem interesting. <br />See Rybo's jitterbug 7th triangle spacetime fluctuations<br />understanding that Gravity and the electroweak forces were combined<br />at the level of energy of the big bang which in turn forced the<br />creation of the below described filaments. Cool!<br /><br />--- In Cosmology_and_Astrophysics@yahoogroups.com, "jethro_cole"<br /><jethro_cole@y... /> wrote:<br /> /><br /> /> BobA [citing Hannes Alfven]: "Space is filled with a network of<br /> /> currents which transfer energy and momentum over large or very<br />large<br /> /> distances. The currents often pinch to filamentary or surface<br /> /> currents. The latter are likely to give space, as also interstellar<br /> /> and intergalactic space, a cellular structure."<br /> /><br /> /> Alfven is the Grand Old Man of plasma physics, Bob. He basically<br /> /> founded the subject, by studying the pinch effect, which controls<br />the<br /> /> way electron beams propagate, and the behavior of Alfven waves.<br />These<br /> /> can be undertood as the motion of magnetic lines of force, which<br />are<br /> /> weighted by the particles that spiral around them.<br /> /><br /> /> Unfortunately, Alfven sided with Hoyle and Halton Arp, in<br />refusing<br /> /> to accept the ideas of the Big Bang, and GR theory. He tried to<br /> /> explain the Hubble red shift in terms of plasma physics (using<br /> /> something like the "tired light" hypothesis), and as a result he<br /> /> managed to eclipse himself.<br /> /><br /> /> On the other hand, Standard Physics has always tried to<br />understood<br /> /> the formation of galaxies and stars as a gravity effect - to the<br /> /> exclusion of magnetic forces, which certainly dominated space<br />during<br /> /> the Big Bang era. As a result it fails badly, in missing the<br />magnetic<br /> /> mechanisms that produced galactic spiral arms, and induce the<br />f