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Originally Posted by xelasnave
Wow even more evidence of the Push Universe  ... thanks for that Alex I found it very interesting  .
I have a feeling you could be an "electric universe" observer  ... may I ask if that is correct  ?
alex   
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Alex, i explore all mainstream & alternative models, i guess at the moment i'm very intrigued with the sheer amount of new data coming from radio telescopes, particularly excited plasma structures MANY time larger than the structure represented by an optical photo of a galaxy.
kind of a "wow, who woulda thunk it moment", from my lil 10" dob.
One thing is becoming increasingly obvious, charge separation is there, we're guna have to deal with it...
As mentioned, B Gaensler from USYD is developing models, where he says...
(along the lines of) "if you include the magnetism (and yes he knows the electric currents are there) we observe on large scales, alot of the problems disappear". Him and his team really have some exciting work.
Regarding push gravity, i've really enjoyed Tom Van Flandern's first few chapters on this in his book "Dark Matter & Missing Planets", and continue to absorb similar push theories. I feel push models can adequately describe the effects we see, unfortunately, to me, falls short of the 'how'. Mind you, as does GR (for me), as does any other theory so far (for me) at the moment. I'm still looking. There are still a number of areas i'd really like to explore indepth, APM, some of the newer MONDs.
I'm always happy to hear more, or be pointed in directions of any insights you or others may have!
http://www.ift.uam.es/workshops/Dark...kMatterPie.jpg
I'm probably towards to side of "hey your maths is impeccable, but i don't buy it"... with respect to the above image...hey... shoot me.... i still don't buy it / care.... I'd have to say i proceed with a healthy skepticism of all physics that cannot be verified in a lab.... I prefer to start from the lab, and work out... others prefer to start from models and work in. All good, each to their own.
I'm a strong believer in free minds, people sharing, and then... go make your own mind up. So i find comfort in your phrase "trust no one".
One thing is clear, there are many qualified talented people working on all angles at all these problems, we should celebrate them all. If Hawking can get away with talking about worm holes, surely an electric current or magnetic field can get a mention when discussing observations.