I'm not an expert in mini black holes, again it is important to understand
one's limit of knowledge. Not sure what your problem with them is but your
terminology doesn't seem right. Instead of using your intuition read the
literature and point out specific problems in their models and equations.

Thermo 101 maybe doesn't apply to objects like mini black holes. Do you
understand GR  and quantum mechanics enough to see what is the problem with
mini black hole evaporation? I don't and as I said I have a PhD in
Astrophysics. I could try to read the literature and hope to get a feeling
for it, but it would take me quite some time that I have not at the moment.

I can tell you that we do understand pretty well why the corona is so hot,
we have good models that account for that even if not completely. The best
theory at the moment is that is heated up by wave heating:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corona#Coronal_heating_problem

If you have a model that can do better than this and it is well developed
with equations and calculations I suggest you to publish on the topic. Just
don't use a bunch of nonsense words and point to the lack of a full
explanation by the experts as a sure sign of their incompetence and
closemindness.

Giovanni





On Sun, Jan 20, 2013 at 12:45 PM, ChemE Stewart <[email protected]> wrote:

>
> On Sun, Jan 20, 2013 at 1:33 PM, Giovanni Santostasi <
> [email protected]> wrote:
>
>> ize is a million bucks you know.
>
>
> In all due respect I read a lot of research papers and what I realized is
> that you astro dudes obviously did not do well in thermodynamics 101 or you
> would realize that those massive micro black holes do not have enough
> surface area to radiate all of that entropy back to the universe as heat
> except over millinia, so they remain massive and energetic, since they
> shred matter at their surface due to their hot atomic surface.  Very simple
> concept really.  They are what make's the sun's corona a million degrees
> since they are orbiting around its nucleus.
>
> She spits them at us during CMEs and solar flares and they create our
> weather and seismic events. I am an engineer and not a chemist and I deal
> with thermodynamics all the time. I will stop at the insults because it is
> not my nature.
>
> I am open to your ideas where 95% of the universe resides??
>
>

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