#1
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Polar Sunrise
http://www.usap.gov/videoclipsandmaps/spwebcam.cfm
It hardly looks like astronomy however ,with polar dawn now ell established as the stars disappear from view, the Sun will come into view in a few weeks as the planet continues to turn as a function of its orbital motion. There is no proof,evidence or any other legal jargon that occupies the rabble at lower latitudes, there is just the predictable appearance of the Sun on the Equinox for the first time in 6 months and reflecting one of two surface rotations to the Sun that go on simultaneously. Let the crude strut around with pretenses and error, this insight is for those who are not afraid of being individuals and alone. |
#2
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Polar Sunrise
The sky gets very busy around the area where the Sun comes into view at dawn, the difference being that the unique polar dawn at the South pole lasts for a considerable period of weeks when the Sun eventually shows itself on September 22nd as the Earth has a unique surface rotation as a function of its orbital motion -
http://www.usap.gov/videoclipsandmaps/spwebcam.cfm An atmosphere that lacked color for so long, even when the moon passed before it on the June Solstice now takes on that amazing glow for those who admire the event daily at sunrise and sunset. When people get jaded of opinions designed to diminish individuals or humanity itself they can turn to that intimacy which is their astronomical inheritance - something to love in a world when men no longer feel what is important. Again,a unique dawn that happens once a year at that location. |
#3
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Polar Sunrise
Gerald Kelleher wrote:
The sky gets very busy around the area where the Sun comes into view at dawn, the difference being that the unique polar dawn at the South pole lasts for a considerable period of weeks when the Sun eventually shows itself on September 22nd as the Earth has a unique surface rotation as a function of its orbital motion - http://www.usap.gov/videoclipsandmaps/spwebcam.cfm An atmosphere that lacked color for so long, even when the moon passed before it on the June Solstice now takes on that amazing glow for those who admire the event daily at sunrise and sunset. When people get jaded of opinions designed to diminish individuals or humanity itself they can turn to that intimacy which is their astronomical inheritance - something to love in a world when men no longer feel what is important. Again,a unique dawn that happens once a year at that location. It shows at about 8 pm UT on the 21st and takes until about 8 am on the 23rd to clear the horizon. During this period it moves 1 and a half times around the horizon. Can you explain why? |
#4
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Polar Sunrise
On Friday, September 9, 2016 at 7:48:06 PM UTC+1, Mike Collins wrote:
Gerald Kelleher wrote: The sky gets very busy around the area where the Sun comes into view at dawn, the difference being that the unique polar dawn at the South pole lasts for a considerable period of weeks when the Sun eventually shows itself on September 22nd as the Earth has a unique surface rotation as a function of its orbital motion - http://www.usap.gov/videoclipsandmaps/spwebcam.cfm An atmosphere that lacked color for so long, even when the moon passed before it on the June Solstice now takes on that amazing glow for those who admire the event daily at sunrise and sunset. When people get jaded of opinions designed to diminish individuals or humanity itself they can turn to that intimacy which is their astronomical inheritance - something to love in a world when men no longer feel what is important. Again,a unique dawn that happens once a year at that location. It shows at about 8 pm UT on the 21st and takes until about 8 am on the 23rd to clear the horizon. During this period it moves 1 and a half times around the horizon. Can you explain why? This is really only for people who haved lived and live as individuals - the Sun coming into view on the Equinox for the first time in 6 months is a result of a Great rotation, one that now can be seen directly from an orbiting satellite - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CFrP6QfbC2g The same change in colors with an anticipated appearance of the Sun as the planet turns and it does so in two distinct ways so that on September 22nd there will be two distinct types of sunrises , one going on due to daily rotation and the other as a function of the planet's orbital motion. http://www.usap.gov/videoclipsandmaps/spwebcam.cfm That soft glow of orange and red will be matched soon enough at the Northern equivalent as the glow marks polar sunset. |
#5
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Polar Sunrise
Gerald Kelleher wrote:
On Friday, September 9, 2016 at 7:48:06 PM UTC+1, Mike Collins wrote: Gerald Kelleher wrote: The sky gets very busy around the area where the Sun comes into view at dawn, the difference being that the unique polar dawn at the South pole lasts for a considerable period of weeks when the Sun eventually shows itself on September 22nd as the Earth has a unique surface rotation as a function of its orbital motion - http://www.usap.gov/videoclipsandmaps/spwebcam.cfm An atmosphere that lacked color for so long, even when the moon passed before it on the June Solstice now takes on that amazing glow for those who admire the event daily at sunrise and sunset. When people get jaded of opinions designed to diminish individuals or humanity itself they can turn to that intimacy which is their astronomical inheritance - something to love in a world when men no longer feel what is important. Again,a unique dawn that happens once a year at that location. It shows at about 8 pm UT on the 21st and takes until about 8 am on the 23rd to clear the horizon. During this period it moves 1 and a half times around the horizon. Can you explain why? This is really only for people who haved lived and live as individuals - the Sun coming into view on the Equinox for the first time in 6 months is a result of a Great rotation, one that now can be seen directly from an orbiting satellite - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CFrP6QfbC2g The same change in colors with an anticipated appearance of the Sun as the planet turns and it does so in two distinct ways so that on September 22nd there will be two distinct types of sunrises , one going on due to daily rotation and the other as a function of the planet's orbital motion. http://www.usap.gov/videoclipsandmaps/spwebcam.cfm That soft glow of orange and red will be matched soon enough at the Northern equivalent as the glow marks polar sunset. Why can't you answer my question? You can see it's true form the webcam (although there seem to be very few times when it's live). You can't deny the truth. So explain it! |
#6
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Polar Sunrise
On Friday, September 9, 2016 at 8:52:36 PM UTC+1, Mike Collins wrote:
Gerald Kelleher wrote: On Friday, September 9, 2016 at 7:48:06 PM UTC+1, Mike Collins wrote: Gerald Kelleher wrote: The sky gets very busy around the area where the Sun comes into view at dawn, the difference being that the unique polar dawn at the South pole lasts for a considerable period of weeks when the Sun eventually shows itself on September 22nd as the Earth has a unique surface rotation as a function of its orbital motion - http://www.usap.gov/videoclipsandmaps/spwebcam.cfm An atmosphere that lacked color for so long, even when the moon passed before it on the June Solstice now takes on that amazing glow for those who admire the event daily at sunrise and sunset. When people get jaded of opinions designed to diminish individuals or humanity itself they can turn to that intimacy which is their astronomical inheritance - something to love in a world when men no longer feel what is important. Again,a unique dawn that happens once a year at that location. It shows at about 8 pm UT on the 21st and takes until about 8 am on the 23rd to clear the horizon. During this period it moves 1 and a half times around the horizon. Can you explain why? This is really only for people who haved lived and live as individuals - the Sun coming into view on the Equinox for the first time in 6 months is a result of a Great rotation, one that now can be seen directly from an orbiting satellite - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CFrP6QfbC2g The same change in colors with an anticipated appearance of the Sun as the planet turns and it does so in two distinct ways so that on September 22nd there will be two distinct types of sunrises , one going on due to daily rotation and the other as a function of the planet's orbital motion. http://www.usap.gov/videoclipsandmaps/spwebcam.cfm That soft glow of orange and red will be matched soon enough at the Northern equivalent as the glow marks polar sunset. Why can't you answer my question? You can see it's true form the webcam (although there seem to be very few times when it's live). You can't deny the truth. So explain it! Dawn and sunrise as they happen in two distinct ways is a product of a turning Earth and ,for the first time, an entire generation of kids can watch Antarctica cross the sunlit fact of the Earth while watching it rotate in its daily rotation. The surface point called the South pole is unique as that in the one surface point on Antarctica where the Sun is present and absent for 6 months at a time - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CFrP6QfbC2g Something different is happening around an area of the planet where few people live yet modern imaging makes it possible for everyone to share the spectacle or a miracle. |
#7
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Polar Sunrise
Gerald Kelleher wrote:
On Friday, September 9, 2016 at 8:52:36 PM UTC+1, Mike Collins wrote: Gerald Kelleher wrote: On Friday, September 9, 2016 at 7:48:06 PM UTC+1, Mike Collins wrote: Gerald Kelleher wrote: The sky gets very busy around the area where the Sun comes into view at dawn, the difference being that the unique polar dawn at the South pole lasts for a considerable period of weeks when the Sun eventually shows itself on September 22nd as the Earth has a unique surface rotation as a function of its orbital motion - http://www.usap.gov/videoclipsandmaps/spwebcam.cfm An atmosphere that lacked color for so long, even when the moon passed before it on the June Solstice now takes on that amazing glow for those who admire the event daily at sunrise and sunset. When people get jaded of opinions designed to diminish individuals or humanity itself they can turn to that intimacy which is their astronomical inheritance - something to love in a world when men no longer feel what is important. Again,a unique dawn that happens once a year at that location. It shows at about 8 pm UT on the 21st and takes until about 8 am on the 23rd to clear the horizon. During this period it moves 1 and a half times around the horizon. Can you explain why? This is really only for people who haved lived and live as individuals - the Sun coming into view on the Equinox for the first time in 6 months is a result of a Great rotation, one that now can be seen directly from an orbiting satellite - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CFrP6QfbC2g The same change in colors with an anticipated appearance of the Sun as the planet turns and it does so in two distinct ways so that on September 22nd there will be two distinct types of sunrises , one going on due to daily rotation and the other as a function of the planet's orbital motion. http://www.usap.gov/videoclipsandmaps/spwebcam.cfm That soft glow of orange and red will be matched soon enough at the Northern equivalent as the glow marks polar sunset. Why can't you answer my question? You can see it's true form the webcam (although there seem to be very few times when it's live). You can't deny the truth. So explain it! Dawn and sunrise as they happen in two distinct ways is a product of a turning Earth and ,for the first time, an entire generation of kids can watch Antarctica cross the sunlit fact of the Earth while watching it rotate in its daily rotation. The surface point called the South pole is unique as that in the one surface point on Antarctica where the Sun is present and absent for 6 months at a time - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CFrP6QfbC2g Something different is happening around an area of the planet where few people live yet modern imaging makes it possible for everyone to share the spectacle or a miracle. Modern imaging allows us to watch the sun seem to circle the horizon every Greenwich Mean day from the South Pole. This demonstrates that the South Pole rotates with the rest of the Earth. It also allows us to see the apparent rotation of the stars around sigma octantis every sidereal day during the south polar winter. This demonstrates the true rotation of the Earth. If you want anybody to agree with you you have to explain these facts and not ignore them. Refusing to explain why this could happen in your universe means you are lying to the world by omission. It's also why not a single person out of the billions of possible converts believes you. You are doomed to to keep repeating the same ridiculously simplistic misunderstandings until you die. Sit down. Assume the other side (that's ever body else ) is right. Think of reasons why they are wrong. The main thing you have to do is show how the two verifiable observations I mantis end above are wrong. If you can't do that nobody will believe you and you will spend the rest of your life as a mildly amusing crank who can't convince even his own family. |
#8
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Polar Sunrise
Mike Collins wrote:
Gerald Kelleher wrote: On Friday, September 9, 2016 at 8:52:36 PM UTC+1, Mike Collins wrote: Gerald Kelleher wrote: On Friday, September 9, 2016 at 7:48:06 PM UTC+1, Mike Collins wrote: Gerald Kelleher wrote: The sky gets very busy around the area where the Sun comes into view at dawn, the difference being that the unique polar dawn at the South pole lasts for a considerable period of weeks when the Sun eventually shows itself on September 22nd as the Earth has a unique surface rotation as a function of its orbital motion - http://www.usap.gov/videoclipsandmaps/spwebcam.cfm An atmosphere that lacked color for so long, even when the moon passed before it on the June Solstice now takes on that amazing glow for those who admire the event daily at sunrise and sunset. When people get jaded of opinions designed to diminish individuals or humanity itself they can turn to that intimacy which is their astronomical inheritance - something to love in a world when men no longer feel what is important. Again,a unique dawn that happens once a year at that location. It shows at about 8 pm UT on the 21st and takes until about 8 am on the 23rd to clear the horizon. During this period it moves 1 and a half times around the horizon. Can you explain why? This is really only for people who haved lived and live as individuals - the Sun coming into view on the Equinox for the first time in 6 months is a result of a Great rotation, one that now can be seen directly from an orbiting satellite - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CFrP6QfbC2g The same change in colors with an anticipated appearance of the Sun as the planet turns and it does so in two distinct ways so that on September 22nd there will be two distinct types of sunrises , one going on due to daily rotation and the other as a function of the planet's orbital motion. http://www.usap.gov/videoclipsandmaps/spwebcam.cfm That soft glow of orange and red will be matched soon enough at the Northern equivalent as the glow marks polar sunset. Why can't you answer my question? You can see it's true form the webcam (although there seem to be very few times when it's live). You can't deny the truth. So explain it! Dawn and sunrise as they happen in two distinct ways is a product of a turning Earth and ,for the first time, an entire generation of kids can watch Antarctica cross the sunlit fact of the Earth while watching it rotate in its daily rotation. The surface point called the South pole is unique as that in the one surface point on Antarctica where the Sun is present and absent for 6 months at a time - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CFrP6QfbC2g Something different is happening around an area of the planet where few people live yet modern imaging makes it possible for everyone to share the spectacle or a miracle. Modern imaging allows us to watch the sun seem to circle the horizon every Greenwich Mean day from the South Pole. This demonstrates that the South Pole rotates with the rest of the Earth. It also allows us to see the apparent rotation of the stars around sigma octantis every sidereal day during the south polar winter. This demonstrates the true rotation of the Earth. If you want anybody to agree with you you have to explain these facts and not ignore them. Refusing to explain why this could happen in your universe means you are lying to the world by omission. It's also why not a single person out of the billions of possible converts believes you. You are doomed to to keep repeating the same ridiculously simplistic misunderstandings until you die. Sit down. Assume the other side (that's ever body else ) is right. Think of reasons why they are wrong. The main thing you have to do is show how the two verifiable observations I mantis end above are wrong. If you can't do that nobody will believe you and you will spend the rest of your life as a mildly amusing crank who can't convince even his own family. "Mantis" should of course be "mentioned". |
#9
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Polar Sunrise
On Saturday, September 10, 2016 at 12:46:32 PM UTC+1, Mike Collins wrote:
Gerald Kelleher wrote: On Friday, September 9, 2016 at 8:52:36 PM UTC+1, Mike Collins wrote: Gerald Kelleher wrote: On Friday, September 9, 2016 at 7:48:06 PM UTC+1, Mike Collins wrote: Gerald Kelleher wrote: The sky gets very busy around the area where the Sun comes into view at dawn, the difference being that the unique polar dawn at the South pole lasts for a considerable period of weeks when the Sun eventually shows itself on September 22nd as the Earth has a unique surface rotation as a function of its orbital motion - http://www.usap.gov/videoclipsandmaps/spwebcam.cfm An atmosphere that lacked color for so long, even when the moon passed before it on the June Solstice now takes on that amazing glow for those who admire the event daily at sunrise and sunset. When people get jaded of opinions designed to diminish individuals or humanity itself they can turn to that intimacy which is their astronomical inheritance - something to love in a world when men no longer feel what is important. Again,a unique dawn that happens once a year at that location. It shows at about 8 pm UT on the 21st and takes until about 8 am on the 23rd to clear the horizon. During this period it moves 1 and a half times around the horizon. Can you explain why? This is really only for people who haved lived and live as individuals - the Sun coming into view on the Equinox for the first time in 6 months is a result of a Great rotation, one that now can be seen directly from an orbiting satellite - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CFrP6QfbC2g The same change in colors with an anticipated appearance of the Sun as the planet turns and it does so in two distinct ways so that on September 22nd there will be two distinct types of sunrises , one going on due to daily rotation and the other as a function of the planet's orbital motion. http://www.usap.gov/videoclipsandmaps/spwebcam.cfm That soft glow of orange and red will be matched soon enough at the Northern equivalent as the glow marks polar sunset. Why can't you answer my question? You can see it's true form the webcam (although there seem to be very few times when it's live). You can't deny the truth. So explain it! Dawn and sunrise as they happen in two distinct ways is a product of a turning Earth and ,for the first time, an entire generation of kids can watch Antarctica cross the sunlit fact of the Earth while watching it rotate in its daily rotation. The surface point called the South pole is unique as that in the one surface point on Antarctica where the Sun is present and absent for 6 months at a time - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CFrP6QfbC2g Something different is happening around an area of the planet where few people live yet modern imaging makes it possible for everyone to share the spectacle or a miracle. Modern imaging allows us to watch the sun seem to circle the horizon every Greenwich Mean day from the South Pole. Yo can't bring yourself to look at the polar dawn and the transition from that long period of darkness into the even longer period of daylight as the stationary Sun comes into view in less than 2 weeks however other people can look at the twin images that convey a rotating Earth rather than a tilting one and arrive at a juncture where 21st century technology meets natural dynamics and astronomy - http://www.usap.gov/videoclipsandmaps/spwebcam.cfm https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CFrP6QfbC2g Even an Antarctic storm can't obscure the presence of natural sunlight as the forward motion of the planet through space and around the Sun creates a singular surface rotation. How many times have you looked at a dawn just before the Sun came into view and enjoyed the transition is all those colors which show themselves as the Earth turns each 24 hour day ?. On September 22nd a place that only sees one sunrise each year will join a different type of sunrise representing the two Great rotations of the Earth.. It is there for those who can raise themselves to look at the images, nothing more or less. |
#10
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Polar Sunrise
On Saturday, 10 September 2016 13:49:05 UTC+2, Mike Collins wrote:
"Mantis" should of course be "mentioned". Pray do not fall prey to your SC. To obviate a snappy, but dishonourable, "mention." ;-) |
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