258(8): Three Beltrami Solutions

OK thanks again! Your graphics in Section 3 of UFT257 are excellent of course, but Marsh has a section which shows the chaotic structure. I will scan it over tomorrow. In any case that solution can wait. Never any hurry at AIAS.

In a message dated 27/02/2014 14:49:15 GMT Standard Time, writes:

In eqs. 22-25 there seem to be some typos but this does not matter, I double-checked the formulas I used in the computer code.
I checked already the Lundquist solution.
The “chaotic solution” was investigated in section 3 of paper 257, including graphics. Further investigation will show if the streamlines are really chaotic.

Horst

EMyrone@aol.com hat am 27. Februar 2014 um 11:00 geschrieben:

It would be very interesting to animate these solutions. The first one is the most general solution (3) already graphed in stills by Horst Eckardt, where a is any constant vector and where psi is a scalar solution of the Helmholtz wave equation. In general psi is involves the spherical harmonics, and it possible that Maxima and Mathematica provide tables of solutions of the Helmholtz equation. Reed, Marsh and Wikipedia do not give sufficient information about the complete solution. The Reed solution already animated is a cylindrically symmetric solution. There are very many solutions possible and all are possible solutions of the free field ECE equations which used to be known as the Maxwell Heaviside equations. In this note the general solution is reduced to a plane wave solution. In fact it would be interesting to animate the plane waves and B(3). Secondly the Lundquist type solution is given in eqs. (26) to (28). It would be interesting to check that these equations are actually correct, then animate them. Thirdly a chaotic solution is given in eqs. (29) to (31). The relevant references to Marsh are given. All if this refutes Higgs boson theory entirely, and the large cuts to particle physics mean that legislators are beginning to smell a bad kipper on Friday afternoon in Swansea market, a kipper known as a boson.

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