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#1
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On Dec 2, 12:20*am, Richard Clark wrote:
To those who are counting those sunspots (the missing ones), they have theories about that which also involve the freemasons, ancient astronauts, and other influences that will converge on a solution in 2012. * The short explanation is that "time will tell." 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC I'd heard quirks in the solar "jet stream" so to speak.. |
#2
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#3
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On Dec 2, 3:27*pm, wrote:
On Dec 2, 12:20*am, Richard Clark wrote: To those who are counting those sunspots (the missing ones), they have theories about that which also involve the freemasons, ancient astronauts, and other influences that will converge on a solution in 2012. * The short explanation is that "time will tell." 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC I'd heard quirks in the solar "jet stream" so to speak.. It's soot from the sun. http://unwinantennas.com/ |
#4
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On Thu, 3 Dec 2009 14:47:25 -0800 (PST), Bill wrote:
It's soot from the sun. If the shuttle could only get close enough to trim its wick.... |
#5
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On Dec 3, 4:58*pm, Richard Clark wrote:
On Thu, 3 Dec 2009 14:47:25 -0800 (PST), Bill wrote: It's soot from the sun. If the shuttle could only get close enough to trim its wick.... The antenna sold today as a "slinky" is not the slinky of old as shown in Jasik's book. If one is to put a lumped load into the schematics of an antenna then one MUST add a cancellation to the structure as the intent for maximum efficiency of radiation is the correct use of distributed loads only. The present day slinky consists of continuous length of wound inductance or a "lumped" load. The true slinky consists of equal amounts of clockwise and clockwise turns such that the lumped inductance is canceled leaving only distributed loads. O.T As far as the "soot" term being presently bandied around, it is an adjective which describes the chemical effects of combustion. Only those old in the tooth or unfamilier with physics describe it solely as a product of burning coaland nothing else! This is similar to the use of "waves" in physics with respect to particles. One is a noun, where the other is a adjective that describes the action of same. |
#6
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On Dec 3, 7:59*pm, Art Unwin wrote:
As far as the "soot" term being presently bandied around, it is an adjective which describes the chemical effects of combustion. Only those old in the tooth or unfamilier with physics describe it solely as a product of burning coal and nothing else! Does your meaning of combustion encompass nuclear fusion? http://unwinantennas.com/ This is similar to the use of "waves" in physics with respect to particles. One is a noun,*where the other is a adjective that describes the action of same. Wavy? |
#7
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On Fri, 4 Dec 2009 12:13:17 -0800 (PST), Bill wrote:
As far as the "soot" term being presently bandied around, it is an adjective which describes the chemical effects of combustion. Does your meaning of combustion encompass nuclear fusion? I once encounter a young wag on campus ( a LaRoucheitte in disguise) trying to argue (there seemed to be no other outcome expected to this encounter) that Pythagoras law was wrong. The hidden agenda seemed (and I say seemed only because this disguised follower of LaRouche could never get to the point) to be for (or it could have as easily been against) Nuclear power. He waved his hands at the sun as the font of all energy (what this had to do with Pythagorean law was a long and rambling exercise) and that oil was for naught in comparison. I harkened to comparisons as they are often fraught with error... my argumentative dwarf snapped on that hook like an intellectual turtle. He invoked how much power there was to be had by turning the moon into our own special sun by nuking it. I venture to offer that we needn't send missiles to the moon when a match head had enough ooomph to power Seattle for a day. (I drew my own comparison carefully, knowing the rhetorical advantage of choice in a match.) "How could a match head barely light a cigarette, much less power a city for a day?" Came his indignant, and proud retort - thinly disguised as the master-stroke of logical humiliation. I pointed out the difference between nuclear energy (his topic of choice) and chemical energy (his topic of complete equal ignorance), two concepts his arguments wandered between without care nor concern for accuracy in terminology or science. It was just my luck that all this attracted another eavesdropper who wanted to dip his oar in this polluted water. I stepped out quickly with my disguised LaRoucheitte chasing me with epithets such as "I hope I'm never in YOUR class!" 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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