User talk:CoronalMassAffection/Archive 2023
Alfven theoremHi there. I am not sure what you are trying to achieve with the edits to the Alfven's theorem page. But things are, in my opinion, going very badly awry, and a good page is deteriorating. Firstly you seem to be removing references to magnetic field lines and expressing everything in terms of flux tubes. This is confusing to readers as flux tubes are just bundles of magnetic field lines and Alfven's theorem applies to flux tubes only because it applies to magnetic field lines. Secondly. The point you have removed about Reynolds number is massively important one because although Alfven's theorem was envisaged in terms of infinite conductivity, we soon came to understand it applies to high magnetic Reynolds number which is a different thing. As it now reads (later on), it sounds like the convective limit (which means ideal MHD and the Alfven theorem) only applies because the conductivity is high. This is not the case as in much of space plasma science it applies because velocities are high and, even more importantly, because spatial scales are high. This crucial fact is now completely hidden from the reader. On a much less important point: you are talking about a "co-moving surface" and it is not clear what this means. It actually means a surface moving with the plasma velocity which, as I have noted is the mass-weighted mean of the ion and electron velocities. Incidentally, there is a much more easily-understood and quicker way of proving Alfven's theorem which is to assume apriori that it applies, think about magnetic flux continuity threading a closed loop and quickly arriving at Faraday's law in integral form, confirming the initial assumption. I should say about who I am and why I feel that I can comment. I am a professor of space physics who has taught MHD and space physics for 30 years. I did in fact meet and discuss MHD with Alfven himself in later life (and learned why he abandoned frozen-in: it is somewhat bizarre), but it was only for one day when I was working for NASA and he was visiting. I do know almost all his former students in Stockholm and have examined PhDs for their students. I did also know well, and learned a lot from James Dungey, Eugene Parker, Ian Axford and Harry Petschek: sadly none of whom are with us any longer. MessageInABottle 20:06, 2 January 2023 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by MichaelLockwood (talk • contribs) MessageInABottle 20:33, 2 January 2023 (UTC)
Continuation
Another quick point about the Alfven theorem page. The wording is perfectly correct (because velocities, electric fields and voltages all depend on what reference frame you are using). But the wording "magnetic flux tubes in a fluid with infinite electrical conductivity are frozen into the fluid and have to move along with it" may cause some confusion. A lot depends on the relative energy densities. The wording is perfectly descriptive (as well as valid) in the solar wind where the dominant energy density is in the bulk flow and the Interplanetary Magnetic Field is dragged along with the plasma velocity of the solar wind. However, by definition of the magnetosphere, the energy density in the magnetic field there dominates over both the thermal energy density and the bulk flow energy density of the particles: in this case the plasma is constrained by the magnetic field and the wording doesn't convey this. I realise it is all relative and depends on the adopted reference frame, but I would suggest wording to the effect that the plasma and the magnetic field are constrained to move together. I really do worry about expressing Alfven's theorem in terms of flux tubes - it applies to magnetic field lines. The present wording makes it sound like frozen-in is a peculiarity of flux tubes where it really applies to the quantum unit of flux tubes, i.e. field lines. On that, I am not sure about saying that a field line is a flux tube of zero cross sectional area: this is possibly meaningless and gets us into metaphysics about what can exist in zero spatial dimension. What one can say for sure is that flux tubes are collections of field lines. My point is that it is magnetic field lines that have a specific definition, not flux tubes and flux tubes are only defined from field lines, not vice-versa. Incidentally. I should tell you more about my conversation with Alfven. He objected to me invoking reconnection (as I knew he would: I was being provocative to try to get to the bottom of what he was thinking) because he objected to the concept of magnetic field lines moving. This raises an interesting point, if you do the reverse of what Einstein and Lorentz did and apply the equations of special relativity (the Lorentz-Fitzgerald equations for time, distance and force) to the Coulomb force law between two charges, one can the arrive at the Lorentz Force law F = q(E + vxB). What is interesting about that is it provides expressions for E and B. And what is interesting about them is one finds that E transforms when you move into a different frame (so there is always a de-Hoffman-Teller frame in which E is zero) but B does not depend on reference frame. If one thinks about it this, it makes sense from Ampere's law which relates B to currents which depend on the relative velocity of differently charged particles and those velocity differences are the same in all reference frames. Thus far, Alfven agreed with me. But he then said, "so it is meaningless to talk of field lines moving" - to which I replied, if they are not moving they are still which is just the zero speed limit of moving. At that point he stopped talking to me and moved on to somebody else. I would have pointed out (had he continued the conversation) that if you have a solanoid and increase/decrease the current through it the magnetic field lines (lines of force identified by, e.g., iron filings) expand outward/contract inwards so field lines moving is a good and valid description of what is happening. Interesting .... and that is the closest I ever got to understanding why he renounced his own theorem which was so phenomenally useful and predictive. I should add this was in 1984, when he was 76 and in answer to others he seemed to be saying that you cannot use a fluid theory at all because cosmic plasmas are collisionless!!! (not true when you include electromagnetic interactions between particles). So he seemed to be disowning MHD in totality (his great achievement) and yet he frequently invoked electromagnetic interactions on particles. MessageInABottle 13:27, 4 January 2023 (UTC)
References
Flares and auroraeSadly, I don't think you realize how widespread this old myth of flares and aurorae still is. I have added the note twice and you have reverted twice, for no good reason that I can see. It doesn't need a reference since the wikilinks support the statement.Skeptic2 (talk) 14:58, 20 January 2023 (UTC)
References
Incorrect statements about solar energetic particles and misleading wording about the effect of flares
Hi Skeptic2, I'm not sure what page you are commenting on - but I think I am going to agree with you. Certainly the connection between CME and flares is much weaker that originally thought, but there is some relation and CMEs do tend to cause aurora to move to lower latitudes and intensify (it is CMEs that do that and certainly not flares) but aurora is present at some latitude all the time without flares or CMEs. On the page Coronal Mass Ejection page under "Impact on Earth" there are some seriously incorrect statements. The worst is: "Solar energetic particles can cause particularly strong aurorae in large regions around Earth's magnetic poles. These are also known as the Northern Lights (aurora borealis) in the northern hemisphere, and the Southern Lights (aurora australis) in the southern hemisphere. Coronal mass ejections, along with solar flares of other origin, can disrupt radio transmissions and cause damage to satellites and electrical transmission line facilities, resulting in potentially massive and long-lasting power outages." Solar energetic particles (SEP) do actually cause aurora but not the conventional kind of aurora that this statement invokes. They precipitate into Earth's atmoaphere INSIDE the polar cap (not in the auroral oval around the polar cap where we see electron aurora) where they generate "proton aurora", because the dominant species in an SEP event is protons (which are mainly generated in interplanetary space by the shock front ahead of CMEs but a weak flux of "impulsive" SEP can come from a flare) and proton aurora is generated by precipitating protons. This is quite different from the aurora called "aurora Australis" and "Aurora Borealis" which is caused by precipitating electrons (i.e not by SEPs at all as stated). It is frequently said that the electrons causing these aurora in the auroral oval come from the solar wind and this is also largely incorrect - most come from Earth's ionosphere (mainly generated by photoionization by solar EUV and X rays) but are energized inside the magnetosphere using energy extracted from solar wind. The wording "Coronal mass ejections, along with solar flares of other origin" is highly misleading as many CMEs are not associated with a flare at all and this wording implies they all are. The way that flares and CMES disrupt radio transmissions are completely different and on different timescales and flares DO NOT cause GICs (Geomagnetically Induced Currents) that disrupt power systems, but CMEs do. Hope this helps. The paragraph I have highlighted is seriously incorrect and must be corrected. I will leave it to someone-else to do it, but will edit if no-one else does. MessageInABottle 15:41, 20 January 2023 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by MichaelLockwood (talk • contribs)
File:Large coronal mass ejection on 2000-02-27 from SOHO LASCO C3 coronagraph.jpg listed for discussionA file that you uploaded or altered, File:Large coronal mass ejection on 2000-02-27 from SOHO LASCO C3 coronagraph.jpg, has been listed at Wikipedia:Files for discussion. Please see the discussion to see why it has been listed (you may have to search for the title of the image to find its entry). Feel free to add your opinion on the matter below the nomination. Thank you. Ixfd64 (talk) 01:56, 6 April 2023 (UTC) ThanksThanks for all your great work in re the sun (and in all seriousness don't forget to include your Wikipedia contributions on the "what else should we know about you?" section of your college applications) Cheers jengod (talk) 01:31, 23 April 2023 (UTC)
A barnstar for you!
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