On Sunday, 22 October 2017 13:11:47 UTC+1, Graham wrote:
Met Office have been forecasting bright or sunny spells over the last few
days, now on day 5 in a row and still zilch!
Thought we may at least get a bright spell today but it's still overcast.
Looks like yet another very dull month in line with all the others we've manage to achieve in 2017:)
Thanks for pointing this out Graham, are you at a vantage point where you can see enough horizon to determine if this is heat island effect?
It will be apparent from a do,e of overcast sky around most of the city with a lighter line of cloud around the horizon.
I believe it is a regular occurrence when the inner planets are overlapping. This will explain the geophysical energy released when they draw far enough apart. Records for light drizzle and haar will reveal this.
I'm playing the version most would use, as it shows why most astronomers may have not realised the connection:
You can see why the system is going to break at the end of the month I imagine (early November perhaps?)
OTOH it won't be so obvious on the smaller version or will it?
Come back tomorrow and I will do September's, see if we can tell which day the super-quake happened.
Met Office have been forecasting bright or sunny spells over the last few
days, now on day 5 in a row and still zilch!
Thought we may at least get a bright spell today but it's still overcast.
Looks like yet another very dull month in line with all the others we've manage to achieve in 2017:)
Thanks for pointing this out Graham, are you at a vantage point where you can see enough horizon to determine if this is heat island effect?
It will be apparent from a do,e of overcast sky around most of the city with a lighter line of cloud around the horizon.
I believe it is a regular occurrence when the inner planets are overlapping. This will explain the geophysical energy released when they draw far enough apart. Records for light drizzle and haar will reveal this.
Mercury is the one that appears to drop out.
Maybe I should do them in BIG?I'm playing the version most would use, as it shows why most astronomers may have not realised the connection:
(Besides the fact they have been conditioned not to think, that is.)
You can see why the system is going to break at the end of the month I imagine (early November perhaps?)
OTOH it won't be so obvious on the smaller version or will it?
Come back tomorrow and I will do September's, see if we can tell which day the super-quake happened.
What is the difference between an astrologer and an astronomer?
Nobody expects an astrologer to compile tables of relativity. But if you want to know what the resultants for the planets look like you can find them all over the astronomers' websites. Here for example:
No comments:
Post a Comment