It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
you should maybe listen to real experts
"Pierre-Marie Robitaille, Ph.D., is a professor of radiology at The Ohio State University. He also holds an appointment in the Chemical Physics Program. In 1998, he led the design and assembly of the world’s first Ultra High Field MRI System. This brought on the need to question fundamental aspects of thermal physics, including ideas related to Kirchhoff’s Law of thermal emission, and more. These presentations are not endorsed by The Ohio State University."
Ah... great a real expert on the subject of Astronomy and Dark matter, from a man who appears to have an obsession that thermal physics has the answers to everything and completely throws out whole areas of knowledge because hey doesn't like them... Such as for example in the black hole video there "Objects don't radiate internally" he is bastardisaing the meaning of what is being said, what he is kind of trying to claim there is that light inside a liquid doesn't exist, and radiation pressure doesn't exist... yet... that is absolutely not the case.
There are many issues with his videos and how he explains things... in one video he says that the sun cannot be a gas, because the ideal gas law cant be used since you need a real surface for their to be pressure... which is, blatantly quite incorrect, he also states that radiation doesn't transfer energy within objects... also proven to be an incorrect statement.
He then goes on to say that the sun is made of metallic hydrogen... because it is at high pressure.
Sooooo yeah, this guy, i don't have to prove anything really, he has his ideas and is arguments for arguing against what the accepted models say, are largely equation picking rather than well motivated, something he trips up over so so often.
SO i think Ill stick with the actual experts... you know... the people who have been working on useful things for the last few years rather someone who got fame years ago and clearly lost their mind. Ad Hominim attack? maybe, but his videos are quite problematic in just how ignorantly he brushes aside so many measurements. I almost wanted him at some-point in his videos to claim that fusion isn't the energy source of the sun.... which again would be to ignore so so so many measurements.
Funny too given his disproval of blackholes is "You cant see it, so you cant prove it exists" Id say the same for his motivation for his solar model, "you cant see the core of the sun mate, so you cant say anything about it"
works both ways.
So called "laws" seem to be some of the lowest formulations of accuracy, many based on classical concepts which have since been superseded by a deeper understanding of nature based on quantum mechanics and Kirchoff's law falls into that category which Robitaille himself knows as in his 2006 paper "An Analysis of Universality in Blackbody Radiation" where he references Einstein's treatment of the subject which is a more advanced approach than Kirchoff's law.
Robitaille comes across as extremely ignorant in that youtube video, as if he doesn't even know about the Einstein treatment, but as his 2006 paper shows he clearly does know about that so I'm trying to figure out what he's doing by acting more ignorant than he is. My hypothesis is that his video is targeting a particular audience (including electric universe followers) who are widely known to lack understanding of mainstream science, and which followers appreciate the ego boost that comes with nodding in agreement to anybody saying anything that disagrees with mainstream science so they can feel like they are smarter than all the smartest scientists in the world.
So Robitaille is not as dumb as he appears in that video, but still there are some really dumb things in that video that he may even know are dumb but he's targeting an audience who won't know the difference, just read the comments, which mostly say things like "I don't know much about science, but I'm really impressed with your work. Maybe mainstream scientists will finally wake up now and get as smart as you and me now that you showed them they are all wrong".
Actually there are some problems with mainstream science, and scientists will admit the problems they know about, and there may be more problems they don't admit or haven't figured out yet.
originally posted by: NeonKnight
a reply to: Arbitrageur
OK fine. Even if he was wrong about something before, that does not prove he is wrong about this.
But you seem to have a closed mind already, so someone like Robitaille is probably not for you.Probably you should keep with the establishment view, after all, they've never been wrong before right?
Robitaille makes several wild claims about astrophysics. He claims that the cosmic microwave background isn’t due to the thermal remnant of the big bang, but rather due to microwaves reflected off the surface of Earth’s oceans. He claims the Sun isn’t powered by nuclear fusion in its core, but is instead a layer of liquid metallic hydrogen at 7 million degrees...
How do you begin to counter such ideas? Well, we could start with the fact that the blackbody law has been confirmed experimentally in numerous ways, or that the cosmic microwave background matches a thermal blackbody to extreme precision, or that stellar temperatures derived from the blackbody law match temperatures found by atomic line spectra. We could point out that the CMB has been observed by satellites millions of miles away from Earth, and aimed away from Earth’s surface, or that reflected microwaves wouldn’t give a blackbody curve due to absorption bands in both water and Earth’s atmosphere. You could point out that his liquid-metal Sun model relies upon thermal blackbodies to be impossible, that his argument in favor of a liquid photosphere is that it looks liquid, and that his main argument against gravity-driven solar fusion is that the model uses mathematics.
the tide of the cosmological mob
Pathological Science and Media
we all need to have an open mind about these things
originally posted by: Arbitrageur
Actually there are some problems with mainstream science, and scientists will admit the problems they know about, and there may be more problems they don't admit or haven't figured out yet.
originally posted by: NeonKnight
a reply to: Arbitrageur
OK fine. Even if he was wrong about something before, that does not prove he is wrong about this.
But you seem to have a closed mind already, so someone like Robitaille is probably not for you.Probably you should keep with the establishment view, after all, they've never been wrong before right?
In contrast to that, let's say 100 people come up with 100 mutually exclusive alternative ideas, of which at least 99 must be wrong, and possibly all 100 are wrong.
So the fact that mainstream science is wrong about something, does little to support any one of those 100 alternative ideas. Each must be evaluated on their own merits and each has a likelihood of being wrong from 99% to 100%.
The problem with Robitaille is the way he just throws out measurements he doesn't like, which you can't do if you're really seeking the truth.
You've already damaged your credibility by asserting you find Robitaille credible, so you saying that means nothing.
originally posted by: NeonKnight
I know this for sure.
I think it's likely some part of cosmology will be proven wrong. For example, we have a crisis in cosmology over the Hubble Constant giving us two different measurements using two different methods. That's a serious problem, and everybody knows it and admits it, so something is likely wrong in our models that needs to be fixed, unless it's a data problem, but so far it doesn't look like a data problem. So, if you posted a video of someone harping on the problem with the Hubble constant measurements and saying those proved a huge problem with mainstream cosmology, I'd be agreeing.
Almost everything we think we know now about cosmology will be proven wrong in the long run.
Even without a single new experiment, just agreement with all the old experiments, is enough to kill almost every idea that you might have...
It's almost impossible to solve these problems, precisely because we know so much already that anything you do is bound to screw everything up. So if you manage to find one idea that's not obviously wrong, it's a big accomplishment. Now that's not to say that it's right. But not obviously being wrong is already a huge accomplishment in this field. That's the job of a theoretical physicist."
originally posted by: Arbitrageur
You've already damaged your credibility by asserting you find Robitaille credible, so you saying that means nothing.
originally posted by: NeonKnight
I know this for sure.
I did, though I think you should question your own technical abilities when you can't figure out how to follow the simple instruction in the ATS embedding script which says "please insert video number here", you pasted the entire link! Do you think an entire link is a video number? People do this all the time so you're certainly not the first, but they don't make claims like "Almost everything we think we know now about cosmology will be proven wrong in the long run." such as you did, so if you think your believing Robitaile wasn't good enough reason why you should doubt your claim, reconsider based on your own inability to follow a simple instruction, so why should you believe your own statement about cosmology, which certainly requires a much greater degree of technical competence to understand than inserting a video number?
originally posted by: NeonKnight
Perhaps you should watch his latest video now that I have it linked above.
Because Robitaille points out that scientists rarely if ever admit they are wrong. In fact they usually come up with statements just like the quote from the video coming from the BICEP2 press conference in 2014...
"If we are to be criticized, it should be for over-interpreting our data, not for being wrong." Professor Clement Pryke
From the very beginning of the BICEP2 story, I’ve been reminding you (here and here) that it is very common for claims of great scientific discoveries to disappear after further scrutiny, and that a declaration of victory by the scientific community comes much more slowly and deliberately than it often does in the press. Every scientist knows that while science, as a collective process viewed over time, very rarely makes mistakes, individual experiments and experimenters are often wrong. (To its credit, the New York Times article contained some cautionary statements in its prose, and also quoted scientists making cautionary statements. Other media outlets forgot.)
Science, Inc.
What you are getting a glimpse of, if you are following this story, is the scientific process in action. In physics — I can’t speak for other sciences, and I know there are some where it is not true — the assumption by the experts is that every claim of a scientific result, especially a major discovery, is wrong until proven right. Every result, especially one of particular significance, is poked and prodded, scrutinized and questioned, and subject to a battery of stress tests. Of course the scientists doing the measurement do this first, as best they can, knowing that it’s better to discover mistakes in private than in public. Then their colleagues do the same, checking the details of the measurement, repeating it (more or less), and trying to do even better measurements of the same effect. Anywhere along the way during this process, an experiment can fail to pass muster.
RhEvans | May 22, 2014 at 9:07 AM |
Another excellent discussion of the skepticism over the BICEP2 results. As Matt correctly states in the penultimate paragraph, what we are seeing here is the scientific process in action. A discovery is always treated with a certain amount of disbelief by the scientific community, and the more spectacular the discovery the more this is the case. BICEP2’s result is now being analysed, scrutinised and picked apart by cosmologists around the World, and it will not be treated as correct until other experiments confirm the result, and if they don’t or if a flaw is found in the BICEP2’s analysis, then the result will be treated as a false detection.
That's fine, skip my replies, should I be any more offended than all the cosmologists are when you say "Almost everything we think we know now about cosmology will be proven wrong in the long run." As I said, some things in cosmology are likely wrong, but almost everything? So, that's fine, I won't expect any replies from you then, but rather these posts are an update for anybody else who reads the thread, that I did watch the video after you posted a working link, and contrary to the BICEP2 saga proving cosmology is wrong which seems to be a main focus of the video, the BICEP2 saga shows the great lengths to which scientists go to challenge each other, especially when making new significant announcements.
originally posted by: NeonKnight
You've now convinced me that engaging with you is a waste of time and effort. You've also convinced me to skip reading any of your replies.