Skip to content
CosmosExplorer

Peratt Plasma Structure Formation

1986 · Anthony Peratt
Fringe

Birkeland currents and plasma instabilities produce galaxy-like structures in particle-in-cell simulations.

Skip 3D content

In one sentence

Anthony Peratt's particle-in-cell simulations from the 1980s showed that interacting Birkeland current filaments evolve into spiral and barred galaxy-like shapes under electromagnetic forces, motivating a plasma-based account of cosmic structure formation.

The claim

Anthony Peratt, a plasma physicist formerly at Los Alamos, developed a technical plasma cosmology program centered on particle-in-cell simulations of large-scale plasma interactions. He showed that current-carrying filaments can naturally evolve into spiral and barred galaxy-like shapes under electromagnetic forces.

Peratt argued that observed galaxy morphologies, large-scale filaments in the cosmic web, and radio brightness and polarization patterns reflect dominant electromagnetic structure formation rather than gravitational collapse. The work appears mainly in IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science and is taken seriously within plasma physics, though not within mainstream cosmology.

The family stance

The universe is structured by plasma physics and electromagnetic forces operating on cosmic scales. There is no singular beginning; cosmic structure arises from current sheets and plasma instabilities rather than gravitational collapse from a hot Big Bang.

Predictions

  • Galaxy morphology emerges from plasma current interactions, not gravitational dynamics with dark matter
  • Strong magnetic field signatures in galactic and intergalactic filaments
  • Specific polarization patterns in radio observations of galaxies and filaments

Evidence

  • Particle-in-cell simulations do produce filament structures resembling observed cosmic filaments
  • Galactic magnetic fields are real and ubiquitous, validating the importance of plasma physics on these scales

Counterpoints

  • Simulations show possible plasma structures but do not demonstrate that gravity is dispensable on cosmic scales
  • Does not address CMB, primordial nucleosynthesis, or the Hubble diagram
  • Most cosmologists find the simulations qualitative and unable to reproduce quantitative observations like galaxy rotation curves better than gravitational models with dark matter
0votes
Go deeperTechnical detail with proper terminology

Peratt's 1986 paper in IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science (vol. 14, p. 763) developed the formation of systems of galaxies from interacting plasma filaments. See also his monograph 'Physics of the Plasma Universe' (Springer, 1992; 2nd ed. 2015) for a technical treatment.

References

  1. Established
    Peratt (1986) Evolution of the Plasma Universe II: The formation of systems of galaxies, IEEE Trans. Plasma Sci. 14, 763
  2. Established
    Peratt (1992/2015) Physics of the Plasma Universe, Springer

Last reviewed May 15, 2026

Spotted an error? Have a source to add?

Prefer email?

You can also send a prefilled email with the variant URL already filled in.

Related theories