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#1
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![]() "Brian Morrison" wrote On Sat, 12 Jul 2014 19:17:40 +0200 Dogon wrote: -The sunspot-count is falsified since a long time now. So how do you prevent people with their own helioscopes from counting the true number of spots? Brian Morrison Because they don't excist ! Show me one. .. --- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: --- |
#2
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On 7/15/2014 11:06 AM, Dogon wrote:
"Brian Morrison" wrote On Sat, 12 Jul 2014 19:17:40 +0200 Dogon wrote: -The sunspot-count is falsified since a long time now. So how do you prevent people with their own helioscopes from counting the true number of spots? Brian Morrison Because they don't excist ! Show me one. Our local astronomy club has several (it has a lot of members, although I'm not one of them). And once or twice a year, they hold a public viewing of the sun for anyone interested. And their pictures always match the ones you find on the NASA site - at least the couple of times I've been there. So much for your hogwash. Time for you to get a new tin hat. -- ================== Remove the "x" from my email address Jerry, AI0K ================== |
#3
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![]() "Jerry Stuckle" wrote (tried to) On 7/15/2014 11:06 AM, Dogon wrote: "Brian Morrison" wrote On Sat, 12 Jul 2014 19:17:40 +0200 Dogon wrote: -The sunspot-count is falsified since a long time now. So how do you prevent people with their own helioscopes from counting the true number of spots? Brian Morrison Because they don't excist ! Show me one. Our local astronomy club has several (it has a lot of members, although I'm not one of them). And once or twice a year, they hold a public viewing of the sun for anyone interested. And their pictures always match the ones you find on the NASA site - at least the couple of times I've been there. What a dumb reaction ! Ofcourse the pictures are the same ! That was not the issue ! The issue was the FALSE sunspots count. Can you read man ? .. --- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: --- |
#4
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Dogon wrote:
"Jerry Stuckle" wrote (tried to) On 7/15/2014 11:06 AM, Dogon wrote: "Brian Morrison" wrote On Sat, 12 Jul 2014 19:17:40 +0200 Dogon wrote: -The sunspot-count is falsified since a long time now. So how do you prevent people with their own helioscopes from counting the true number of spots? Brian Morrison Because they don't excist ! Show me one. Our local astronomy club has several (it has a lot of members, although I'm not one of them). And once or twice a year, they hold a public viewing of the sun for anyone interested. And their pictures always match the ones you find on the NASA site - at least the couple of times I've been there. What a dumb reaction ! Ofcourse the pictures are the same ! That was not the issue ! The issue was the FALSE sunspots count. Can you read man ? What false sunspot counts? As anyone with two sheets of paper and a pin can easily count and verify the sunspot numbers, this has to be the dumbest conspiracy post ever to appear on USENET. -- Jim Pennino |
#5
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On 7/16/2014 3:25 PM, Dogon wrote:
"Jerry Stuckle" wrote (tried to) On 7/15/2014 11:06 AM, Dogon wrote: "Brian Morrison" wrote On Sat, 12 Jul 2014 19:17:40 +0200 Dogon wrote: -The sunspot-count is falsified since a long time now. So how do you prevent people with their own helioscopes from counting the true number of spots? Brian Morrison Because they don't excist ! Show me one. Our local astronomy club has several (it has a lot of members, although I'm not one of them). And once or twice a year, they hold a public viewing of the sun for anyone interested. And their pictures always match the ones you find on the NASA site - at least the couple of times I've been there. What a dumb reaction ! Ofcourse the pictures are the same ! That was not the issue ! The issue was the FALSE sunspots count. Can you read man ? Sure, I can read. But you obviously cannot understand what's plainly in front of your face. If the sunspot numbers were fudged, as you claim, then the images could NOT have matched. And thousands of amateur astronomers around the world would have seen and reported on the discrepancy. You need to put your tin hat back on. -- ================== Remove the "x" from my email address Jerry, AI0K ================== |
#6
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![]() "Jerry Stuckle" wrote On 7/16/2014 3:25 PM, Dogon wrote: "Jerry Stuckle" wrote (tried to) On 7/15/2014 11:06 AM, Dogon wrote: "Brian Morrison" wrote On Sat, 12 Jul 2014 19:17:40 +0200 Dogon wrote: -The sunspot-count is falsified since a long time now. So how do you prevent people with their own helioscopes from counting the true number of spots? Brian Morrison Because they don't excist ! Show me one. Our local astronomy club has several (it has a lot of members, although I'm not one of them). And once or twice a year, they hold a public viewing of the sun for anyone interested. And their pictures always match the ones you find on the NASA site - at least the couple of times I've been there. What a dumb reaction ! Ofcourse the pictures are the same ! That was not the issue ! The issue was the FALSE sunspots count. Can you read man ? Sure, I can read. But you obviously cannot understand what's plainly in front of your face. If the sunspot numbers were fudged, as you claim, then the images could NOT have matched. And thousands of amateur astronomers around the world would have seen and reported on the discrepancy. No it aint that simple. In 2012 the supposed 'peak', the sun was mostly BLANK ! So if you can put one and one together; there couldn't be 125 sunspots. The HEAD of the solar dept. from NASA said also to underline this with: "The sun is in the pits of the deepest solar MINIMUM in nearly a century." End quote. I know all to well that radio amateurs don't want to think outside the box, but technicaly they changed the count from 'human eye' to computer count. You and i know that a computer sees always something. A fraction darker pixel etc. Every astronomer ? Well look for 'dead astronomers' and you will be horrified. And what about the physical evidence ? For how long is 80 mtrs useless now ? We live in a solarpeak ?? How many have you experienced ?? These shills here want to suppress any rumor about 'magnetic pole' reversal due to this: http://poleshift.ning.com among others. It is that serious folks. .. --- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: --- |
#7
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On 7/17/2014 10:58 AM, Dogon wrote:
"Jerry Stuckle" wrote On 7/16/2014 3:25 PM, Dogon wrote: "Jerry Stuckle" wrote (tried to) On 7/15/2014 11:06 AM, Dogon wrote: "Brian Morrison" wrote On Sat, 12 Jul 2014 19:17:40 +0200 Dogon wrote: -The sunspot-count is falsified since a long time now. So how do you prevent people with their own helioscopes from counting the true number of spots? Brian Morrison Because they don't excist ! Show me one. Our local astronomy club has several (it has a lot of members, although I'm not one of them). And once or twice a year, they hold a public viewing of the sun for anyone interested. And their pictures always match the ones you find on the NASA site - at least the couple of times I've been there. What a dumb reaction ! Ofcourse the pictures are the same ! That was not the issue ! The issue was the FALSE sunspots count. Can you read man ? Sure, I can read. But you obviously cannot understand what's plainly in front of your face. If the sunspot numbers were fudged, as you claim, then the images could NOT have matched. And thousands of amateur astronomers around the world would have seen and reported on the discrepancy. No it aint that simple. In 2012 the supposed 'peak', the sun was mostly BLANK ! So if you can put one and one together; there couldn't be 125 sunspots. The HEAD of the solar dept. from NASA said also to underline this with: "The sun is in the pits of the deepest solar MINIMUM in nearly a century." End quote. I know all to well that radio amateurs don't want to think outside the box, but technicaly they changed the count from 'human eye' to computer count. You and i know that a computer sees always something. A fraction darker pixel etc. Every astronomer ? Well look for 'dead astronomers' and you will be horrified. And what about the physical evidence ? For how long is 80 mtrs useless now ? We live in a solarpeak ?? How many have you experienced ?? These shills here want to suppress any rumor about 'magnetic pole' reversal due to this: http://poleshift.ning.com among others. It is that serious folks. Sure, it's simple. You claimed the sunspot counts were fudged. It's very simple with a helioscope to count the number of sunspots. Yes, the sun may be going through another Maunder Minimum - that is unknown at this time, and scientists don't completely understand what's occurring. But that does NOT mean the counts are incorrect. Radio amateurs constantly "think outside the box". That's where innovation occurs, and hams have done a lot of innovation. And computer counting is not just one shot - there are many pictures of the sun taken every minute; a single "dark pixel" will quickly be filtered out. However, that's another one of your straw man arguments and shows just how little you know - with the magnification used, a single sunspot covers much more than one pixel. As for the magnetic pole reversal - that's no secret, and has been discussed quite extensively in many publications. But that's not uncommon; it happens at intervals of 100K to 1M years, with an average of 450K years. Since the last reversal was 780K years ago, we are overdue. Just google "geomagnetic pole reversal" and you'll get all kinds of hits. It's never wiped out life on earth, or even had a major effect on life. It just changed the direction of compasses. And since a shift takes 1K to 10K years, I doubt my compass will be pointing south in my lifetime. You REALLY need to put your tin hat back on! You're only showing your gross ignorance. And BTW - I've been a ham for over 46 years. YOU figure out how many solar peaks I've been through (hint: they occur about every 11 years). But then we also know you're not a ham. -- ================== Remove the "x" from my email address Jerry Stuckle ================== |
#8
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![]() No it aint that simple. In 2012 the supposed 'peak', the sun was mostly BLANK ! So if you can put one and one together; there couldn't be 125 sunspots. The HEAD of the solar dept. from NASA said also to underline this with: "The sun is in the pits of the deepest solar MINIMUM in nearly a century." End quote. I know all to well that radio amateurs don't want to think outside the box, but technicaly they changed the count from 'human eye' to computer count. You and i know that a computer sees always something. A fraction darker pixel etc. Every astronomer ? Well look for 'dead astronomers' and you will be horrified. And what about the physical evidence ? For how long is 80 mtrs useless now ? We live in a solarpeak ?? How many have you experienced ?? These shills here want to suppress any rumor about 'magnetic pole' reversal due to this: http://poleshift.ning.com among others. It is that serious folks. Sure, it's simple. You claimed the sunspot counts were fudged. It's very simple with a helioscope to count the number of sunspots. Yes, the sun may be going through another Maunder Minimum - that is unknown at this time, and scientists don't completely understand what's occurring. But that does NOT mean the counts are incorrect. Radio amateurs constantly "think outside the box". That's where innovation occurs, and hams have done a lot of innovation. And computer counting is not just one shot - there are many pictures of the sun taken every minute; a single "dark pixel" will quickly be filtered out. However, that's another one of your straw man arguments and shows just how little you know - with the magnification used, a single sunspot covers much more than one pixel. As for the magnetic pole reversal - that's no secret, and has been discussed quite extensively in many publications. But that's not uncommon; it happens at intervals of 100K to 1M years, with an average of 450K years. Since the last reversal was 780K years ago, we are overdue. Just google "geomagnetic pole reversal" and you'll get all kinds of hits. It's never wiped out life on earth, or even had a major effect on life. It just changed the direction of compasses. And since a shift takes 1K to 10K years, I doubt my compass will be pointing south in my lifetime. You REALLY need to put your tin hat back on! You're only showing your gross ignorance. And BTW - I've been a ham for over 46 years. YOU figure out how many solar peaks I've been through (hint: they occur about every 11 years). But then we also know you're not a ham. Hi Jerry, I too am an old duffer. I got my license in 1955. I am 71 now and still in good health. Has to be some kind of miracle there for my wife and I both to still be in good health. Conspiracy theories are very popular and some who have little education jump on any that come along. I am not a big fan of conspiracy theories myself. However, I still question the Warren report. I believe there were other forces at work beyond Oswald. A lot of nutters confuse magnetic pole reversal with actual reversal of our rotational poles. Of course that would be catastrophic and makes much more interesting reading. Anyway, back to ham radio. I have certainly seen a lot of different propagation conditions on many bands in my lifetime. I can remember when I was 12 and could use very low power, read that as 10 watts on CW and talk to the world. My equipment was very primitive. My first receiver was a Knight kit space spanner. A regenerative receiver. I had to mow lawns and clear brush to buy my equipment or the parts to build equipment and it was a lot of work just gathering 10 dollars together. I still remember when I did my first single transistor radio. The transistor was a Raytheon CK722 that cost me 7 dollars. I treasured that little germanium transistor like it was gold. When I was 13, I discovered how to make alcohol in my home built still. I found that far more profitable. I worked my way up to a Halicrafters SX100 and a Multi-Elmac transmitter with a home made power supply. I felt like this was the Cadillac of ham gear at the time. Unfortunately, after a couple of years, the sheriff discovered who was selling all the moonshine in our county. I was lucky. I just got yelled at and had to sink all my moonshine equipment in our lake. I was devastated. I only thought of myself as an entrepreneur. There I was 14, and jobless. I finally got a job driving truck when I turned 16 after school to support my rather expensive habit. I was kinda like a junky. There was always more equipment to want and buy. When I finally graduated from high school I had more equipment than was ever necessary to operate on the ham bands. I was an obsessed teenager. W8EZI formerly WN7EZI |
#9
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On Wed, 16 Jul 2014 16:31:46 -0400, Jerry Stuckle
wrote: If the sunspot numbers were fudged, as you claim, then the images could NOT have matched. And thousands of amateur astronomers around the world would have seen and reported on the discrepancy. I don't know much about sunspot counting, so I thought it might be useful to Google for how it's done: http://spaceweather.com/glossary/sunspotnumber.html Looks like we have the "Boulder Sunspot Number" and the "International Sunspot Number". Boulder is about 25% higher than International. The ARRL uses the "Wolf number" from Zurich: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wolf_number http://sidc.oma.be/silso/ This month's count. Note the wide variation: http://sidc.oma.be/silso/eisnplot Average? Ok, that's explained in the FAQ: http://sidc.oma.be/silso/faq-page From the SpaceWeather page, counting your own might be problematic: As a rule of thumb, if you divide either of the official sunspot numbers by 15, you'll get the approximate number of individual sunspots visible on the solar disk if you look at the Sun by projecting its image on a paper plate with a small telescope. Hmmm... Maybe I didn't want to know more about sunspots. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
#10
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Dogon wrote:
"Brian Morrison" wrote On Sat, 12 Jul 2014 19:17:40 +0200 Dogon wrote: -The sunspot-count is falsified since a long time now. So how do you prevent people with their own helioscopes from counting the true number of spots? Brian Morrison Because they don't excist ! Show me one. http://solar-center.stanford.edu/observe/ Requirements: Two sheets of stiff paper, a pin, and the ability to punch a hole in one of the sheets of paper without sticking yourself with the pin. The last requirement may be a bit much for you. -- Jim Pennino |
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