I put up some mp3 files from some videos in which I'd discussed some of my thoughts related to spacetime, but I took those down and will upload some of them again, as soon as I can, here. I'll link to more of the pictures, as I find the relevant ones from public-domain sources. I should be able to collect most of them. I've also linked to some segments of youtube videos.
Youtube videos:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=taM3mzpzw1Q [Operation Snapper: Dog Shot; May 1st, 1952; Shows transient darkening effect of spacetime distortion and so-called ghost bubble, above the detonation site, shortly after detonation; See articles on ghost bubbles, ghost radiation, ghost images, ghost emissions, etc., in relation to the astrophysics of black holes and in relation to string theory and so forth: (
http://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&q=ghost+%22black+hole%22+OR+quasar+OR+pulsar+OR+astrophysical+OR+Arxiv+OR+galactic&btnG=Search&as_sdt=100000001&as_ylo=&as_vis=0)]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nbJdMcrJ4uA [Operation Hardtack: Shot Umbrella; Shows Rayleigh-Taylor instability "fingers," forming a jagged, teeth-like pattern, shortly after detonation; See articles on Rayleigh-Taylor fingers in magnetohydrodynamic models of supernova events and in chemical reactions, etc.: (
http://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&q=%22Rayleigh+taylor%22+teeth+OR+fingers&btnG=Search&as_sdt=100000001&as_ylo=&as_vis=0)]
 |
| View of "caging" effect, by magnetic field lines and the dynamics of the equatorial electrojet or "electron fountain," of an equatorial nuclear detonation. |
This diagram shows a simplified depiction of some aspects of three-dimensional magnetic reconnection and represents different regions of spacetime as consisting of sheets, as in "world sheets," and the diagram shows the tendency for the dynamics of spacetime turnover/replication to be maximally divergent, as a consequence of the hyperbolic geometry of spacetime. Neither neutral-magnetic-flux regions (three-dimensional regions) nor the "two-dimensional" surfaces that define the regions' geometries is a region or surface that exhibits no magnetic flux. The magnetic flux lines are just organized in complex ways that can "balance out" and produce a relatively-stable (and, to some extent, symmetric, at least along some "axes") region of spacetime that isn't just a jumble or "mess" of magnetic flux lines and patterns of spacetime curvature. The "semi-neutral" regions I should note that some 3D reconnection regions are referred to as being quasi-separatrices or quasi-separatrix layers, and this means that there are sharp or "sudden" transitions or boundary surfaces between different parts of the 3D reconnection region that exhibit magnetic flux along opposing or considerably-different directions [see Aulanier et al., 2005: (
http://www.aanda.org/index.php?option=com_article&access=standard&Itemid=129&url=/articles/aa/full/2005/48/aa3600-05/aa3600-05.html); (
http://www.aanda.org/articles/aa/pdf/2005/48/aa3600-05.pdf)]:
 |
| Simplified view of three-dimensional magnetic reconnection, between a pair of two-dimensional, neutral-sheet surfaces, to form a neutral-sheet manifold that is shown as containing a pseudoscalar surface in a transverse plane of the manifold. |
 |
| Polar (and, here, "redshifted") jets of a black hole, shown ejecting plasma blobs (i.e. buoyant bubble or "big blue bump," etc.) that could be viewed as being "entangled," in some manner, with ghost bubble in the same jets. |
 |
| Post-Lightning Runaway Electron Acceleration and Dynamics of "Turnover" Waveforms Between Two Regions of Spacetime (As In "Intercloud Magnetohydrodynamics," etc.). |
 |
| This picture and the one below are on wikimedia commons. This picture shows a "ghost condensate" type of spacetime distortion, oriented vertically, with respect to the ground. The browser, actually, isn't letting me link to the pages to get the url to the U.S. government site [the archives of the National Nuclear Security Administration's Nevada Site Office: (http://www.nv.doe.gov/library/PhotoLibrary/57-052.jpg)]. I'll get those darn pages loaded at some point. They're big ones, I know, but I'll load 'em. It's the same source of public-domain images that I cited on the other picture(s). |
No comments:
Post a Comment