Heh...her papers are certainly tiring me out..
Anyway, the use of her formula in the
Faint Young Sun Problem. I'd never heard about this before but, after having done some reading, it seems to be an interesting problem in its own right.
This is the Wiki statement of the problem, or paradox:
In other words, Earth should have been frozen over 4bn years ago.
The paradox has apparently been resolved, by assuming larger concentrations of methane and carbon dioxide in the atmosphere of early Earth. However, and as usual (!), they are still arguing about it:
http://space.newscientist.com/articl...young-sun.html
Two good BAUT threads on the subject:
http://www.bautforum.com/astronomy/3...n-paradox.html
http://www.bautforum.com/questions-a...early-sun.html
Louise's analysis and solution are given below, in her own words. It's extracted from here:
http://riofriospacetime.blogspot.com...n-paradox.html
Correct so far...
Statement of the problem...still correct..
Partly correct. 'No geological evidence' is a bit strong...at the moment there seems to be evidence either way.
http://www.astrobio.net/news/modules...ticle&sid=2232
http://www.space.com/scienceastronom...arm-earth.html
Her point about Mars and the probability of a similar solution seem valid though. Any Mars people out there, please comment...
http://www.earthsci.unimelb.edu.au/m...radox_FYS.html (Black Background Warning!)
The bit you have to take with a pinch of salt...
Her English is all wrong here but this is essentially what she's saying:
4bn years ago, t, the age of the Universe, was less (obviously). This means c, the speed of light, was higher (from her relationship). This means, from E = mc^2, rest mass energy of hydrogen was higher. Therefore the sun released more energy 4 bn years ago and the Young Sun Problem is thus solved.
There is a nice graph of estimated Solar Output on the same page:
http://riofriospacetime.blogspot.com...n-paradox.html
So....what do you make of that? It's a neat solution certainly. Might be horrendously wrong, but at least it's elegant!