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Oil and NASA's mission statement change
17 years 4 months ago #17966
by mhelland
Replied by mhelland on topic Reply from Mike Helland
Way off topic material deleted by moderator LB
(what's with the car parts?)
(what's with the car parts?)
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17 years 3 months ago #17993
by emanuel
Replied by emanuel on topic Reply from Emanuel Sferios
Did I actually start this topic? Man I come around here about once every two or three months. I can't believe this is still such a lively debate. We really live in times of information (and disinformation) overload. When anything can be believed we are left upon our emotional prejudices to decide which "facts" to draw upon. I've decided I'm on the fence with regards to everything now.
Emanuel
Emanuel
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- Peter Nielsen
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17 years 3 months ago #18004
by Peter Nielsen
Replied by Peter Nielsen on topic Reply from Peter Nielsen
Emmanuel's writing that he is "on the fence with regards to everything now" inspires me to finally get around to writing that I have changed my mind about Al Gore¡¯s ¡°An Inconvenient Truth".
I am now back on the "Global Warming Swindle" side of the argument where I was earlier in this column.
I am now back on the "Global Warming Swindle" side of the argument where I was earlier in this column.
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17 years 3 months ago #19604
by Jim
Replied by Jim on topic Reply from
You can be sure of one thing-the atmosphere won't warm the Earth but the Earth will warm the atmosphere. It will do this weather or not bigAL or anyone else cares.
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- Joe Keller
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16 years 7 months ago #20731
by Joe Keller
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Last night I observed evidence of a large, damaged and gyrating, geosynchronous satellite. A priori, this could be a shot by any of the space powers, either a test against one of its own unneeded satellites, or an act of war against someone else's. Two successful such tests, one by China and one by the U.S., have been publicized recently.
At ~00:00 +/- 00:10 Central Daylight Time March 26, 2008, I observed (from lat 42.09N, long 93.46W) intermittently for ~20 min., by eye and with 8x40 binoculars, a flashing light NE of Tau Leonis and later E of Beta Virginis. I took about 6 one-second 35mm photos, and about 2 approx. 20-sec time exposure photos, at f/2 with a 50mm focal length (25mm aperture)(not telephoto) lens, on a tripod, on Kodak 200 Gold (C-41 film)(unfortunately my film was somewhat outdated). The nearer of two mercury vapor farm lights, I turned off at the pole, but the farther light involved rusty fuses near bare wires, so I didn't try to turn it off. The moon wasn't up yet, but there is light pollution in that direction, due to Ames, and due to a large well-lit feedlot, the county seat, and Des Moines (I own no filters). One of the time exposures included the flash; I think it was the only snapshot that did capture the flash. Aiming the camera was by feel, due to the dimness of stars in the region. I never saw the flash through the viewfinder, but saw it over the top of the camera when the shutter was open.
I took the film for development today. The photo shop proprietor said he lacked the equipment to push-process it, but I told him to proceed anyway. I warned him that it was an astronomical photo of a satellite flash, and not to worry about the other photos on the roll. He said this was something with which he was familiar because he had taken such photos himself in years past.
I timed about six cycles by counting seconds; they always were ~6 sec. The flash lasted no longer than ~1/30 sec. This would be consistent with a < 2-degree light cone and a < 700-mile wide track crossing N. America. The magnitude and color varied. The brighter flashes tended to be blue-white, and the dimmer, orange. As near as I could tell, there was some positive correlation both of color and brightness. That is, the brighter bluish and dimmer reddish flashes generally didn't seem to alternate. I estimated the brightest flashes as equal to Sirius, in my notes last night, but by more considered judgment today would estimate magnitude 0.0; calculation from this suggests a reflecting surface 30 feet in diameter, assuming 100% albedo.
I think my times and positions yield a sidereal speed estimate which is accurate within a factor of two; the path (relative to the stars, which of course move) was approx. 5 deg in 20 minutes, eastward, more parallel to the ecliptic (which was about 2 deg south of the flashes) than to the equator (which also is nearby, farther south), from approx 172 to 177 ecliptic longitude.
The flashes could not be seen after about 00:20 +/- 00:10. This would have been about the time of passage into Earth's umbra.
A balloon with a flashing light hardly could be higher than 30 mi., thus hardly could be farther than 50 mi. Even if my sidereal movement estimate were wrong by as much as a factor of two, that would imply only 5 deg / 20 minutes of time at 50 mi, i.e., 12 miles per hour. This probably is too slow for east-west winds at high altitude.
Cloudy skies are predicted for my region tonight. This phenomenon should be visible from elsewhere in N. or S. America, where skies are clear (and where the track of the reflected flash lies, if it is narrow).
Though many satellites rotate, it would seem inefficient for the large surface areas - the solar panels and dish reflectors - to spin. A 10 rpm spin for a 30 ft diameter object would imply 0.5g centrifugal force, a considerable structural strength and weight requirement.
Update March 28: the photo shop man didn't make prints of the relevant negatives because he saw nothing on them. I see nothing on them either, though I'll look again with a microscope. The stars in the region were, at best, barely bright enough to see in the viewfinder.
Update April 2: last night was very clear; I looked at about the same time and place, but didn't see it.
At ~00:00 +/- 00:10 Central Daylight Time March 26, 2008, I observed (from lat 42.09N, long 93.46W) intermittently for ~20 min., by eye and with 8x40 binoculars, a flashing light NE of Tau Leonis and later E of Beta Virginis. I took about 6 one-second 35mm photos, and about 2 approx. 20-sec time exposure photos, at f/2 with a 50mm focal length (25mm aperture)(not telephoto) lens, on a tripod, on Kodak 200 Gold (C-41 film)(unfortunately my film was somewhat outdated). The nearer of two mercury vapor farm lights, I turned off at the pole, but the farther light involved rusty fuses near bare wires, so I didn't try to turn it off. The moon wasn't up yet, but there is light pollution in that direction, due to Ames, and due to a large well-lit feedlot, the county seat, and Des Moines (I own no filters). One of the time exposures included the flash; I think it was the only snapshot that did capture the flash. Aiming the camera was by feel, due to the dimness of stars in the region. I never saw the flash through the viewfinder, but saw it over the top of the camera when the shutter was open.
I took the film for development today. The photo shop proprietor said he lacked the equipment to push-process it, but I told him to proceed anyway. I warned him that it was an astronomical photo of a satellite flash, and not to worry about the other photos on the roll. He said this was something with which he was familiar because he had taken such photos himself in years past.
I timed about six cycles by counting seconds; they always were ~6 sec. The flash lasted no longer than ~1/30 sec. This would be consistent with a < 2-degree light cone and a < 700-mile wide track crossing N. America. The magnitude and color varied. The brighter flashes tended to be blue-white, and the dimmer, orange. As near as I could tell, there was some positive correlation both of color and brightness. That is, the brighter bluish and dimmer reddish flashes generally didn't seem to alternate. I estimated the brightest flashes as equal to Sirius, in my notes last night, but by more considered judgment today would estimate magnitude 0.0; calculation from this suggests a reflecting surface 30 feet in diameter, assuming 100% albedo.
I think my times and positions yield a sidereal speed estimate which is accurate within a factor of two; the path (relative to the stars, which of course move) was approx. 5 deg in 20 minutes, eastward, more parallel to the ecliptic (which was about 2 deg south of the flashes) than to the equator (which also is nearby, farther south), from approx 172 to 177 ecliptic longitude.
The flashes could not be seen after about 00:20 +/- 00:10. This would have been about the time of passage into Earth's umbra.
A balloon with a flashing light hardly could be higher than 30 mi., thus hardly could be farther than 50 mi. Even if my sidereal movement estimate were wrong by as much as a factor of two, that would imply only 5 deg / 20 minutes of time at 50 mi, i.e., 12 miles per hour. This probably is too slow for east-west winds at high altitude.
Cloudy skies are predicted for my region tonight. This phenomenon should be visible from elsewhere in N. or S. America, where skies are clear (and where the track of the reflected flash lies, if it is narrow).
Though many satellites rotate, it would seem inefficient for the large surface areas - the solar panels and dish reflectors - to spin. A 10 rpm spin for a 30 ft diameter object would imply 0.5g centrifugal force, a considerable structural strength and weight requirement.
Update March 28: the photo shop man didn't make prints of the relevant negatives because he saw nothing on them. I see nothing on them either, though I'll look again with a microscope. The stars in the region were, at best, barely bright enough to see in the viewfinder.
Update April 2: last night was very clear; I looked at about the same time and place, but didn't see it.
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