Re: Ritz ballistic emission theory material




Henri Wilson wrote:
On 15 Apr 2006 10:02:30 -0700, "fritzius@xxxxxxxxxxxxx"
<fritzius@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:


It would really be helpful if one did not have to wade through the
inordinate amount of invective and caustic name calling to find the the
good stuff on this discussion group.

This is a constant problem. It takes some time to learn who one should ignore.
Not surprisingly almost all the insults and nonscietific material comes from
those supporting the Einsteinian 'religion'. They have nothing constructive to
offer and possess the mentality of a typical religious fanatic. They will
automatically ridicule anyone who attacks their faith.

However if one is patient, one can actually have a decent and constructive
discusion here. For instance with some unintentional assistance from several
noted SRians, I have been able to compile a very comprehensive VBasic program
which simulates the predicted brightness curves of variable stars. It is based
on the principle that light leaves its source at c and travels at c+v wrt
Earth.

If you have a windows based computer you can run my programs. (which are quite
safe to run)

see my latest at: www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/variables.exe
or the more complicated: www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/variablestars.exe

HW.
www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/index.htm

Henri,

I've done some similar simulations, the results of which can be seen at

http://www.datasync.com/~rsf1/binaries.htm

The distance one should use in such modeling is NOT the distance from
the
binary to Earth, but rather the distance from the binary to what I'm
calling
John Fox's extinction distance. For the crab pulsar that distance
should
be on the order of one fourth the Earth-Moon distance.

An executable version of the c+v light curve generating program (if
your
computer doesn't operate too fast) is online at

http://www.datasync.com/~rsf1/d-cephei.exe


Bob Fritzius

.



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