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Severe Geomagnetic Storm Intervals in History And Future Prospects
http://www.spacew.com/swim/bigstorm.html http://www.spacew.com/swim/ssn-kp8.jpg |
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DON'T tell Charles Cagle about this!!!!!!!!!!
Clear, Dark, Steady Skies! (And considerate neighbors!!!) |
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Would you include "supernova" as an "extreme storm"?
---JRC--- "Vincent van der Laan" wrote in message = ... =20 Just wondering: is it possible (in theory) that an extreme storm might = be severe enough to blow away our atmosphere? =20 Scary thought... (might want to move to Mars ![]() |
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On 28-10-2003 23:53, in article ,
"John R. Copeland" wrote: Would you include "supernova" as an "extreme storm"? ---JRC--- I would, but the sun is too smal to go nova. It will first become a red giant and then it will slowly contract and cool down. |
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But Sirius IS big enough, AND it's big enough, AND it will go off someday.
Then we may just be toast. "Vincent van der Laan" wrote in message ... On 28-10-2003 23:53, in article , "John R. Copeland" wrote: Would you include "supernova" as an "extreme storm"? ---JRC--- I would, but the sun is too smal to go nova. It will first become a red giant and then it will slowly contract and cool down. -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
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To reply, remove the "z" if one appears in my address "Bob Greschke" wrote in message ... But Sirius IS big enough, AND it's big enough, AND it will go off someday. Then we may just be toast. I don't think any of US have anything to worry about... "Vincent van der Laan" wrote in message ... On 28-10-2003 23:53, in article , "John R. Copeland" wrote: Would you include "supernova" as an "extreme storm"? ---JRC--- I would, but the sun is too smal to go nova. It will first become a red giant and then it will slowly contract and cool down. -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
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Bob Greschke wrote:
But Sirius IS big enough, AND it's big enough, AND it will go off someday. Then we may just be toast. Sirius A is only 2.3 solar masses and will not go supernova. Instead it will become a red giant, but does not orbit close enough to its companion, Sirius B, a white dwarf to for gas to fall onto the little bugger and create a Type Ia supernova. Sirius A will eventually become a white dwarf like its companion that preceded it. This is what will happen to our sun too. |
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On Tue, 28 Oct 2003 23:30:23 +0100, Vincent van der Laan
wrote: On 28-10-2003 22:16, in article , "Sam Wormley" wrote: Severe Geomagnetic Storm Intervals in History And Future Prospects http://www.spacew.com/swim/bigstorm.html http://www.spacew.com/swim/ssn-kp8.jpg Just wondering: is it possible (in theory) that an extreme storm might be severe enough to blow away our atmosphere? Scary thought... (might want to move to Mars ![]() It's called a nova, and Mars wouldn't be far enough. Happy trails, Gary (net.yogi.bear) ------------------------------------------------ at the 51st percentile of ursine intelligence Gary D. Schwartz, Needham, MA, USA Please reply to: garyDOTschwartzATpoboxDOTcom |
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On 29-10-2003 15:54, in article ,
"Gary S." Idontwantspam@net wrote: On Tue, 28 Oct 2003 23:30:23 +0100, Vincent van der Laan wrote: On 28-10-2003 22:16, in article , "Sam Wormley" wrote: Severe Geomagnetic Storm Intervals in History And Future Prospects http://www.spacew.com/swim/bigstorm.html http://www.spacew.com/swim/ssn-kp8.jpg Just wondering: is it possible (in theory) that an extreme storm might be severe enough to blow away our atmosphere? Scary thought... (might want to move to Mars ![]() It's called a nova, and Mars wouldn't be far enough. Happy trails, Gary (net.yogi.bear) ------------------------------------------------ I'm not talking about novae, the sun is too small. I was just wondering if solar flares in theory could hurl so much matter into space, that the earth atmosphere would be blown away. I'll ask at some astronomy group, I'm OT here anyway! Regards, Vincent |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
MD History Talk, Roger Launius, "NASA: From the Past to the Future" | LooseChanj | History | 14 | August 10th 03 02:16 AM |