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The Equinox



 
 
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  #1  
Old September 5th 07, 05:38 PM posted to sci.astro.amateur
oriel36
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Posts: 1,189
Default The Equinox


The solar radiation/orbital shadow boundary pivots off the Equator
denoting the latitudinal change -

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...easonearth.png

Within a few weeks,that SR/OS boundary will split the rotational axis
and subsequently all latitudinal areas from pole to pole will share
the daylight/dark symmetry experienced at the Equator the whole year
round.


There are a few people still who believe in variable axial tilt and
this causes daylight/darkness variations and the seasons but modern
imaging of the Earth from space shows what is actually occuring.There
is also a longitudinal change in the SR/OS boundary that causes
variations in the total length of the natural noon cycle rather than
variable axial tilt attributed by astrologers to the Equation of Time
difference between natural noon and 24 hour clock noon.

  #2  
Old September 5th 07, 06:43 PM posted to sci.astro.amateur
oriel36
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Posts: 1,189
Default The Equinox

On Sep 5, 5:38 pm, oriel36 wrote:
The solar radiation/orbital shadow boundary pivots off the Equator
denoting the latitudinal change -

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...easonearth.png

Within a few weeks,that SR/OS boundary will split the rotational axis
and subsequently all latitudinal areas from pole to pole will share
the daylight/dark symmetry experienced at the Equator the whole year
round.

There are a few people still who believe in variable axial tilt and
this causes daylight/darkness variations and the seasons but modern
imaging of the Earth from space shows what is actually occuring.There
is also a longitudinal change in the SR/OS boundary that causes
variations in the total length of the natural noon cycle rather than
variable axial tilt attributed by astrologers to the Equation of Time
difference between natural noon and 24 hour clock noon.


Rephrase -

The longitudinal change in the SR/OS boundary denotes the orbital
motion of the Earth in accordance with Keplerian orbital geometry and
why the daily noon cycles are unequal for all points on Earth .The
longitudinal variations alter the length of the daily noon cycle at
all latitudinal points including the Equator disqualify any
hemispherical description of axial tilt as a component in the Equation
of Time correction.

I suppose there is little chance in recognising that the explanation
for the seasons has just been modified away from variable axial
tilt .






  #3  
Old September 6th 07, 07:47 AM posted to sci.astro.amateur
Hannity & Frankenstein
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1
Default The Equinox

do you ever quit or is it a compulsion you just cant control,
in between strangling small animals and fish?






oriel36 wrote:

The solar radiation/orbital shadow boundary pivots off the Equator
denoting the latitudinal change -

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...easonearth.png

Within a few weeks,that SR/OS boundary will split the rotational axis
and subsequently all latitudinal areas from pole to pole will share
the daylight/dark symmetry experienced at the Equator the whole year
round.

There are a few people still who believe in variable axial tilt and
this causes daylight/darkness variations and the seasons but modern
imaging of the Earth from space shows what is actually occuring.There
is also a longitudinal change in the SR/OS boundary that causes
variations in the total length of the natural noon cycle rather than
variable axial tilt attributed by astrologers to the Equation of Time
difference between natural noon and 24 hour clock noon.


 




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