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On Dec 3, 10:04 am, home@away wrote:
Very impressive Martin. I have tried doing a little H-a imaging using a colour camera (yes, I am fully aware of the inherent drawback), and it is refreshing to see what can be done. Lawrence PS - (re Oriel anon) funny how the idiots always moan about those that achieve anything..... I can pick upo the paper today and read about the expanding tropics as something new - http://news.google.ie/news?tab=gn&hl...ncl=1124410815 Considering that I was working with temperature band expansion for a few year now,I can take quiet satisfaction from an individual approach as I work towards meshing the motions of the Earth and global climate leaving the seasons as a meteorological subset - http://groups.google.ie/group/sci.en...6d67b3412dfad1 If there were astronomers here they would certainly have acknowledged the achievement based on interpreting the images of the Earth from space correctly and assigning an additional orbital component to explain the oscillation of the temperature bands,how they are distinguished from human influences and many other productive avenues.Instead,I enjoy seeing climate studies develop along a route which I have long since taken in a private way.- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nwTrYVBcx9s Now,the modification of Copernican reasoning based on replacing variable inclination with an orbital component is a serious business,no doubt the same people who have discovered the expansion of temperature bands causes imbalances in meteological conditions which inturn leads to me=lting ice ,ect will take another view years to get around to adopting the proper principles which distinguish the natural annual oscillations from the expansion itself. Maybe then I will be suitably satisfied again in my own private way On Sat, 1 Dec 2007 01:21:12 -0800 (PST), ukastronomy wrote: Deep Imaging in Hydrogen Alpha This is a 9 page mini web site intended to show that most of the emission nebulae are far more extensive than most catalogues would have you believe and that under processed images can be seriously misleading to amateur astronomers http://www.martin-nicholson.info/hyd...ogenalpha1.htm Martin Nicholson, Daventry, England. http://www.martin-nicholson.info/1/1a.htm Visit the Astronomical Hall of Shame athttp://www.geocities.com/queen5658/- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
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