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#1
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![]() Weatherlawyer wrote: The latest BBC forecast shows that an occluded front is due to run across Scotland (and points east) late Wednesday. That's pretty good for a sea level forecast given over 3 days back. Well the storm or what there was of it, blew through here earlier today. Gusts of 50 mph maybe? And a fair bit of rain but not the storm it could have been. And now there is a tropical storm (Makani) out towards Hawaii. What an interesting spell. http://satellite.ehabich.info/hurricane-watch.htm The Hawaiian storm isn't going to do much, I think. And it is hardly what you might call misty weather. However: The Low pressure area that seemed to cross Britain in the last few days has re-established itself out in the Atlantic once mo http://www.weather.org.uk/charts/UKCpf048.png -or will have by Sunday, according to that site. I wish that I could find a site that gives the phases between the phases. There are plenty with the well known lunar phase but I need the ones out in the middle of the gibbous and waining crescents. If a new moon is 0% and a full is 100% and the quarter moons are 50%. I want the times of the phases when the moon is 25% and 75% visible. If I could get them, I bet my accuracy would go up by soem 50%. It would be nice to catch up with this fellow: http://earthquake.itgo.com/today.htm |
#2
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Try this for phases: http://www.inconstantmoon.com/index.htm. Not sure
whether timings are included for indeterminate phases Software like any version of the sky has also a phase tool inbedded. Pierre MK-UK |
#3
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![]() wrote: Try this for phases: http://www.inconstantmoon.com/index.htm. Not sure whether timings are included for indeterminate phases. Software like any version of the sky has also a phase tool embedded. Nice site and it lead me back to the JPL, which seems to offer more and more lately: http://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/?horizons (We get bugger all from our own people despite the hideous taxes we pay them in comparison.) JPL produce the nautical and other almanacs in partnership with the Rutherford Physics laboratory in Cambridge. I have looked there a few times to try and get what I wanted but I just forgot the need I once had and developed the ideas I have now, working with what little data there is. Here is a good one for the basic phases: http://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/?horizons: 6000 Year Catalog. When I was working on the ideas, there was nothing like this. So I look forward to the future with more and more confidence. on the saros Interesting that the Saros continues to produces effective phenomenae for centuries. I had thought that a cycle only lasts for three eclipses and that was the end of it. "Every eclipse is said to belong to a Saros series, and each series is given a number. For instance, the annular eclipse of February 1999 belongs to Saros series 140, whilst the total eclipse of August 1999 belongs to series 145. At any point in time there will be around 42 Saros series in progress. The eclipses within any Saros series are not identical, the area they cover gradually migrates, each eclipse being centred slightly to the north or south of its predecessor. This gives a saros series a fixed life span, beginning as a minor eclipse near one of the poles, evolving cycle by cycle into a major eclipse spanning the equatorial regions, and eventually ending as another minor eclipse at the opposite pole. By convention, the odd numbered series begin near the north pole and migrate southwards whilst the even numbered ones move northwards from the south pole. The lifetime of a Saros, from pole to pole, is some 1400 years, during which it will produce between 69 and 86 eclipses. Saros 145 began in January 1639, and will end in April 3009." http://www.inconstantmoon.com/inconstant.htm |
#4
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Weatherlawyer wrote:
Here is a good one for the basic phases: http://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/?horizons: 6000 Year Catalog. That ^ should have read:http://sunearth.gsfc.nasa.gov/eclips.../phasecat.html "The tables available though the links below give the date and time (Universal Time) of all phases of the Moon for the six thousand year period -1999 to +3000 (2000 BCE to 4000 CE). This data is provided primarily to assist in historical research projects. For the year 2000, the length of the mean synodic month (New Moon to New Moon) is 29.530588 days (=29d12h44m03s). However, the length of any one synodic month can vary from 29.26 to 29.80 days due to the perturbing effects of the Sun's gravity on the Moon's eccentric orbit. Each one hundred-year phase table also indicates when an eclipse of the Sun or Moon takes place. An eclipse of the Sun can occur only at New Moon, while an eclipse of the Moon can occur only at Full Moon. Historians should note that the astronomical dating system used in these tables includes the year "0" while the traditional BCE - CE dating convention does not. Thus, the year "0" here corresponds to "1 BCE", the year "-100" is "101 BCE", and so on. The old style Julian calendar is used for dates prior to 1582, while the modern Gregorian calendar is used after that date. For more information, see calendar dates: http://sunearth.gsfc.nasa.gov/eclipse/SEhelp/calendar.html" Not only has the daily percentage visibility of the moon but the declination of it too. I have just spent the evening failing to work out how to convert it to an XL document so I can delete the columns I don't want. I'd rather mess around with that all day than collate a weatherforecast. What I need is a wife who knows how to use a desktop office and finds this sort of thing interesting. Where can I find a desperate, young, rich, and pretty woman who has those qualifications? |
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