fertilizerspike
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Extra Solar Planet Detection
fertilizerspike replied to waitaminute's topic in Astronomy and Cosmology
Here's a really big problem: I have no idea what you mean when you say "the current science". As far as I'm concerned "the current science" is the better explanation.- 23 replies
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Extra Solar Planet Detection
fertilizerspike replied to waitaminute's topic in Astronomy and Cosmology
The load of codswallop is coming out of your mouth. I never claimed direct imaging is the only method of detecting planets. That came from your feverish imagination. Perhaps you should try reading my comments if you intend to critique them. As for other causes of periodic changes in spectra of stars (attributed quite erroneously to velocity), until you can demonstrate you even understand my comments I don't see the point of elaborating. And really I was being generous calling it "margin of error", because actually with only 5% verification, that's a 95% falsification so far. I'm not the least bit concerned about your happiness. This isn't a happiness forum. I'm interested in science. The problem here, I think, is that what you consider to be science is nothing but a collection of fables based on wishful thinking, in which you have 100% unwavering faith. Even when it is exposed to you that your beliefs are not science I feel you will persist in them, growing more and more angry as you find you are unable to defend those beliefs, then you will seek the same remedy that people in your position always seek, to have the offending information obliterated without investigation. You've also left a crucial part from your description of science: experiment- 23 replies
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Put down the crack pipe, there was no hijack, and everything I posted in the thread you cut this from was relevant to the topic. Is there some peculiar and idiosyncratic reason you're suggesting comments about "black hole" don't belong in a thread discussing "black hole"?
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Who's got the most dino findings?
fertilizerspike replied to TransformerRobot's topic in Other Sciences
No, I'm referring to the consistent pattern of fraud and lying among "fossil hunters".- 5 replies
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Why hasn't anyone tried to build a gamma-ray microscope yet?
fertilizerspike replied to Fanghur's topic in Other Sciences
You're citing Heisenberg imagining a gamma ray microscope as proof of his "uncertainty principle"? That's basically what the piece you cited says, that Heisenberg imagined a gamma ray microscope imaging an electron and he found (shocker) that his imaginings fit precisely with his predictions. Eureka!!! Actually you're a little behind the times, it was demonstrated last year that silicon lenses can be used to focus gamma rays. Shocker!!! -
Yes, hair does have such properties, and you can demonstrate them on a cold, dry day with a plastic comb.
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Who's got the most dino findings?
fertilizerspike replied to TransformerRobot's topic in Other Sciences
It's difficult to accurately say considering all the fraud and hoaxing in paleontology. -
tetanus vaccination
fertilizerspike replied to fresh's topic in Anatomy, Physiology and Neuroscience
The mortality rate of untreated tetanus is about 25%, if I'm not too much mistaken. If even rudimentary medical treatment is administered (not injections of vaccines) the mortality rate drops to well below 10%. This low mortality rate combined with the extremely low incidence of tetanus means that taking a tetanus vaccine is akin to playing russian roulette. It may not hurt you, but it won't do you any good and might kill you. Oh, also, tetanus is primarily treated with antibiotics with a very high success rate.- 14 replies
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supplements, are they really convenient?
fertilizerspike replied to eastwest's topic in Anatomy, Physiology and Neuroscience
Food allergies caused by "excessive water intake"? That sounds utterly absurd. Do you have any data to back that up? -
How are super-massive stars formed?
fertilizerspike replied to EWyatt's topic in Astronomy and Cosmology
To date nobody has demonstrated the fusion process said to take place in stars. Not only that, but stellar fusion models explicitly state that stars are self-compressed balls of gas. We know from the known properties of all gases that this is impossible. Gases under no circumstances compress themselves under their own weight while heating up, they expand to fill the available space while cooling. As for a star's size, I'd say it depends on at least two things; the amount of available matter and the magnitude of electric current that formed the star in a "z pinch".- 22 replies
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Sagittarius A*, to name just one that's very nearby. But you could name any "black hole candidate" object, they're all prodigious producers of electromagnetic radiation, in utter defiance of "black hole" assumptions. The "singularity" is riotous in itself, it is a purely mathematical construct with utterly no empirical referent. You're confusing misunderstanding with fact, that's quite the convoluted error you've engaged in.
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Dark Energy is Fictional (split from role in chromosphere)
fertilizerspike replied to fertilizerspike's topic in Speculations
But can you actually produce any of this "dark matter" for study in the lab? Without experiment it's easy to stray off into hallucinatory terrain. -
Extra Solar Planet Detection
fertilizerspike replied to waitaminute's topic in Astronomy and Cosmology
Fewer than 5% of the "discovered" exoplanets have been imaged directly, leaving a 95% margin of error. That pitiable in any sense of the word. Pending further verification of these "methods" used to "detect" planets around stars it's not a safe bet. I guess I should go ahead and explain at least one method that has as yet unverified assumptions at its core, since you're going to keep complaining until I do. Astronogers often claim they can detect planets by changes in a star's "radial velocity". This assumption is flawed because there are of course other phenomena that could be perturbing a star's motion that have nothing to do with any planets. No attempt is made in any of these "radial velocity" methods to exclude other causes, so the observations are not diagnostic of anything.- 23 replies
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I didn't ask for a citation, I asked for the data, which you apparently can not provide. Loomis came to many absurd conclusions, one being that his three pendulum clocks, which were essentially rooted in bedrock, phase shifted 120 degrees, were modulating each others' periods by transmitting inertia through the Earth. He was a rich guy who had a tiny handful of good ideas but mainly bad ones.
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You apparently believe he showed "variation that was consistent with the magnitude and period expected from the variation from the moon". Like all users of the forum I'm sure you're perfectly willing to provide the data he acquired. Please note that anecdotal stories about the evidence are unconvincing. Please provide the data, and then demonstrate that his data agrees with predictions based on whatever model you feel was used to make those predictions.