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Here is what students presently have to look at and it is unsightly
and unacceptable in an era that makes a big deal over climate - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Seasonearth.png It is absolutely crucial to get rid of the 'no tilt/no seasons' view which is unbecoming to this era that now has imaging power to introduce the idea that a planet's climate is somewhere between equatorial and polar so that if the Earth's rotational axis aligned with its ecliptic axis our climate would be equatorial.The polar coordinates turn in a quasi-rotation to the central Sun representing the single cycle that we experience as the seasons at lower latitudes when combined with daily rotation but also,and just as important,the combination of these two motions cause the variations in the natural noon cycles as the orbital quasi-rotation turns unevenly to the central Sun. There is no reason why people should strain themselves with a 'tilted axis' when it is so much easier to handle the introduction of an additional axis which shows itself explicitly as the polar coordinates turn in a circle to the central Sun and to ignore this cycle in this present day and age with such an aggressive assault on climate for social/political reasons is reckless.Terrestrial sciences should not be running on empty and people are certainly feeling the strain of trying to squeeze climate change into a tiny agenda of global warming by people who have no regard for anything other than their lifestyles and the speculative modeling on which they rely. |
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On Apr 30, 2:18*am, oriel36 wrote:
Here is what students presently have to look at *and it is unsightly and unacceptable in an era that makes a big deal over climate - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Seasonearth.png It is absolutely crucial to get rid of the 'no tilt/no seasons' view which is unbecoming to this era that now has imaging power to introduce the idea that a planet's climate is somewhere between equatorial and polar so that if the Earth's rotational axis aligned with its ecliptic axis our climate would be equatorial.The polar coordinates turn in a quasi-rotation to the central Sun representing the single cycle that we experience as the seasons at lower latitudes when combined with daily rotation but also,and just as important,the combination of these two motions cause the variations in the natural noon cycles as the orbital quasi-rotation turns unevenly to the central Sun. There is no reason why people should strain themselves with a 'tilted axis' when it is *so much easier to handle the introduction of an additional axis which shows itself explicitly as the polar coordinates turn in a circle to the central Sun and to ignore this cycle in this present day and age with such an aggressive assault on climate for social/political reasons is reckless.Terrestrial sciences should not be running on empty and people are certainly feeling the strain of trying to squeeze climate change into a tiny agenda of global warming by people who have no regard for anything other than their lifestyles and the speculative modeling on which they rely. |
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