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[email protected] March 23rd 06 04:29 AM

Geomagnetic flip
 
http://physicsweb.org
How would a Geomagnetic flip of Earth's Poles affect radio broadcasting
and receiving?
cuhulin


Hatfield March 23rd 06 08:01 AM

Geomagnetic flip
 
A consideration of Earth's magnetic vector will help us predict the
affect on the radio bands.

In between the period of vector direction up and vector direction down
we will have a short period of vector magnitude zero; during which
Earth's cosmic radiation shield will vanish.

Only those short wave personalities whose listeners happen to be
wearing protective tinfoil hats will have an audience which survives
the conflagration.

So. for example, the Brother Stairs and the Rush Limbaugh programs
should be among the few which survive the pole flip.


David March 23rd 06 02:05 PM

Geomagnetic flip
 
On Wed, 22 Mar 2006 22:29:15 -0600, wrote:

http://physicsweb.org
How would a Geomagnetic flip of Earth's Poles affect radio broadcasting
and receiving?
cuhulin

The water will go down the toilet in the opposite direction. You'll
have to use your starter to turn off your car.


Silfax March 23rd 06 02:24 PM

Geomagnetic flip
 
On 2006-03-23, David wrote:
On Wed, 22 Mar 2006 22:29:15 -0600, wrote:

http://physicsweb.org
How would a Geomagnetic flip of Earth's Poles affect radio broadcasting
and receiving?
cuhulin

The water will go down the toilet in the opposite direction. You'll
have to use your starter to turn off your car.

You will also have to install all batteries in the reverse direction.

bpnjensen March 23rd 06 03:24 PM

Geomagnetic flip
 
The water will go down the toilet in the opposite direction. You'll
have to use your starter to turn off your car.

Not that this has anything to do with either magnetism or coriolis -
but NEITHER of these factors affects the way your water goes down the
drain. Watre is not magnetic, and coriolis acts on far too large a
scale to affect small-scale circulation. The shape of the basin and
any manual force one may exert on the fluid are virtually the only
things that determine whether the imparted rotation is clockwise or
counterclockwise. That's a fact.

Bruce Jensen


David March 23rd 06 03:48 PM

Geomagnetic flip
 
On 23 Mar 2006 07:24:17 -0800, "bpnjensen"
wrote:

The water will go down the toilet in the opposite direction. You'll

have to use your starter to turn off your car.

Not that this has anything to do with either magnetism or coriolis -
but NEITHER of these factors affects the way your water goes down the
drain. Watre is not magnetic, and coriolis acts on far too large a
scale to affect small-scale circulation. The shape of the basin and
any manual force one may exert on the fluid are virtually the only
things that determine whether the imparted rotation is clockwise or
counterclockwise. That's a fact.

Bruce Jensen

Not entirely true. If the basin is perfectly symmetrical and the
water is allowed to dampen out all vortices from the filling process
(i.e. allowed to rest for a day or two) the Coriolis Effect does make
it drain counterclockwise. It works the same way all over the globe.


dxAce March 23rd 06 05:07 PM

Geomagnetic flip
 


David wrote:

On 23 Mar 2006 07:24:17 -0800, "bpnjensen"
wrote:

The water will go down the toilet in the opposite direction. You'll

have to use your starter to turn off your car.

Not that this has anything to do with either magnetism or coriolis -
but NEITHER of these factors affects the way your water goes down the
drain. Watre is not magnetic, and coriolis acts on far too large a
scale to affect small-scale circulation. The shape of the basin and
any manual force one may exert on the fluid are virtually the only
things that determine whether the imparted rotation is clockwise or
counterclockwise. That's a fact.

Bruce Jensen

Not entirely true. If the basin is perfectly symmetrical and the
water is allowed to dampen out all vortices from the filling process
(i.e. allowed to rest for a day or two) the Coriolis Effect does make
it drain counterclockwise. It works the same way all over the globe.


Doesn't water going down a drain form a vortice that spins clockwise in the
northern hemisphere and counter-clockwise in the southern hemisphere?

dxAce
Michigan
USA



Telamon March 23rd 06 07:36 PM

Geomagnetic flip
 
In article ,
dxAce wrote:

David wrote:

On 23 Mar 2006 07:24:17 -0800, "bpnjensen"
wrote:

The water will go down the toilet in the opposite direction. You'll
have to use your starter to turn off your car.

Not that this has anything to do with either magnetism or coriolis -
but NEITHER of these factors affects the way your water goes down the
drain. Watre is not magnetic, and coriolis acts on far too large a
scale to affect small-scale circulation. The shape of the basin and
any manual force one may exert on the fluid are virtually the only
things that determine whether the imparted rotation is clockwise or
counterclockwise. That's a fact.

Bruce Jensen

Not entirely true. If the basin is perfectly symmetrical and the
water is allowed to dampen out all vortices from the filling process
(i.e. allowed to rest for a day or two) the Coriolis Effect does make
it drain counterclockwise. It works the same way all over the globe.


Doesn't water going down a drain form a vortice that spins clockwise in the
northern hemisphere and counter-clockwise in the southern hemisphere?


You got that right Ace.
http://ww2010.atmos.uiuc.edu/(Gh)/guides/mtr/fw/crls.rxml

--
Telamon
Ventura, California

Telamon March 23rd 06 07:38 PM

Geomagnetic flip
 
In article .com,
"bpnjensen" wrote:

The water will go down the toilet in the opposite direction. You'll

have to use your starter to turn off your car.

Not that this has anything to do with either magnetism or coriolis -
but NEITHER of these factors affects the way your water goes down the
drain. Watre is not magnetic, and coriolis acts on far too large a
scale to affect small-scale circulation. The shape of the basin and
any manual force one may exert on the fluid are virtually the only
things that determine whether the imparted rotation is clockwise or
counterclockwise. That's a fact.


This is a pull your leg thread. Get it?

--
Telamon
Ventura, California

David March 23rd 06 07:40 PM

Geomagnetic flip
 
On Thu, 23 Mar 2006 12:07:08 -0500, dxAce
wrote:




Doesn't water going down a drain form a vortice that spins clockwise in the
northern hemisphere and counter-clockwise in the southern hemisphere?

Anticlockwise everywhere.



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