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Wobble in General: |
Sun, Moon & Constellations: Other Factors: |
June 8, 2013 ZetaTalk
This long-exposure capture shows the increased wobble in an undeniable and dramatic manner. In 2007 the wobble was detectible only by a skew in what would otherwise be a perfect circle around Polaris. By March 23, 2010 and April 17, 2010 this skew had gotten wider, making an oval rather than a circle around Polaris. Are the cameras on a drunken pedestal? The establishment falls silent in the face of such evidence, hoping the public does not notice. Now on March 1, 2013 there is a new development. The center of the focus is in two places, not just one!
February 5, 2011 ZetaTalk
As has been present since the wobble ensued in 2004, the Earth wobble takes the form of a figure 8. This causes the N Pole of Earth to lean to one side or the other during the figure 8, and also to lean toward and away from the Sun during the figure 8. The wobble is most violent when the magnetic N Pole of Earth comes up over the horizon and encounters the magnetic push from the N Pole of Planet X, which is increasingly pointing its N Pole directly at the Earth. This point is equivalent to what Nancy calls the New Zealand view, and is directly related to the sloshing magma pushing to the north Pacific and thence sloshing back to raise the Indo-Australian Plate up on the eastern end so that Indonesia can slide under the curve. At the point in the wobble where the mid-day Sun is over Italy, the N Pole of Earth is leaning toward the Sun, which is why the Sun recently appeared two days early in Greenland and Norway and Alaska. This then progresses to be the point where, in Nancy's diagrams, the Sun is over the N American continent. At this point, the N Pole of Earth is moving away from the Sun again, and thus the vertical jet stream over N America, pushing the globe under the cold air of northern Canada. Depending upon where the globe is being pushed, or how much Sun it is getting, or how violent the push is at this or that point, the land underneath will experience weather extremes.
Comment
That's a cracking picture: Photographer captures incredible splits hundreds of yards long in the ice of world's largest freshwater lake
A photographer has captured spectacular cracks hundreds of yards long in the ice of the world's largest freshwater lake.
The stunning pictures of Lake Baikal in Siberia were taken by Alexey Trofimov, who described what he saw as 'magical' and 'supernatural'.
The 44-year-old from Bratsk in Russia stayed in a cabin on Olkhon Island- the fourth-largest lake-bound island in the world - while on his trip.
Baikal is the largest freshwater lake in the world by volume and is also said to be the world's oldest and deepest.
Mr Trofimov said: 'Lake Baikal has magical properties. When I saw these cracks I absolutely fell in love with them and will never forget them.
'Cracks such as these don't seem real and seeing it was like seeing something supernatural.'
'Ice has the capability to rapidly change depending on what temperature it is. When it is heated it is compressed, when it is cold it is expanding - that's how the cracks form.'
Spectacular: A photographer captured these images of cracks hundreds of metres long during a trip to the frozen Baikal Lake in Siberia
Although the cracks were often wide and hundreds of yards long, temperatures were so cold that the lake was completely safe to stand on
See more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3019080/That-s-cracking-pic...
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/science/space/11434924/Solar-eclips...
................Dr Edward Bloomer, an astronomer at the Royal Observatory Greenwich, said the eclipse would be spectacular because the Moon was closer to the Earth than it had been for 18 and a half years.
“The Earth is orbiting around the Sun and sometimes is slightly closer and sometimes further away, and the Earth is also wobbling around on its axis,” he said.
“Likewise the orbit of the Moon around the Earth is elliptical and slightly tilted so it’s rare for the Sun, Earth and Moon to actually line up.
“When they do come into perfect alignment it is called the syzygy effect and when the Moon is closest to Earth you have a total eclipse.....................
another set of time-lapse photographs that clearly show the wobble - the night sky should rotate round Polaris in a circle, not in an oval or egg shape as these photos show:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/travel/travel_news/article-2973559/Shoot...
and one also shows the stars moving abround two foci as has been seen before: http://www.zetatalk.com/newsletr/issue352.htm
Verifying data: "Polar Push occurs when the Sun is over America/Alaska, thus the extreme warmth in Alaska compared to eastern US":
December 30, 2014
The coldest it has been on this day in Anchorage, Alaska, since 1954 is 20 degrees Fahrenheit below zero. The coldest it has been on New Year's Eve in that same time period is even colder: -25. But this year, the lows are expected to be 33 and 27 degrees respectively -- meaning that 2014 will be the first year on record that the temperature didn't drop below zero.
As Alaska Dispatch News notes, the last time the temperature was below zero (again: in Fahrenheit) was Dec. 26, 2013. That was the tail end of a cold snap, of the kind not uncommon in winter -- particularly in Alaska. But ever since, temperatures have been above zero according to readings taken at the airport, with low temperatures reaching zero only once, on February 11.
Complete annual records from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration begin on Jan. 1, 1954. Since then, the number of days Anchorage went below zero each year has dropped from an average of 33.2 in the 1960s to 16 in the 2000s. The year with the second-fewest below-zero days was 2002 (the red line on the graph above).
This is an admittedly arbitrary metric. Zero degrees Fahrenheit is significantly colder than zero degrees Celsius, the freezing point of water. Anchorage is in no immediate danger of becoming a tropical paradise. It's the sort of data point that those seeking bolder action on climate change will embrace, but, as the first chart shows, there's a tremendous amount of volatility in low temperatures, particularly during the winter. One bit of data does not a long-term warming trend make, and next year could very easily see Anchorage experiencing several weeks of below-zero temperatures.
It is, however, the sort of thing that we should expect to see more of. This has been the second-warmest January-to-November period on record in Alaska; ski resorts near Anchorage didn't have enough snow to open for the Thanksgiving holiday. The state has warmed twice as fast as the rest of the country, thawing permafrost and glaciers.
Anchorage's 2014 could be a false alarm; it could be a little spike on the dial. Or it could be the first of many such years to come.
Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2014/12/30/anchorag...
The Earth wobble has the Sun over the Americas (West Coast, etc) to be a bounce back, so the Sun appears higher in the sky, and thus all that warm weather in Alaska. So during the violent Derecho tearing through the midwest Monday evening someone in central Wisconsin noted this, somekind of additional wibble in the wobble!
Did you happen to look outside last night about 9pm? It was as dark as usual until about 8:45 when it became as bright as 7 am in the morning! It lasted until just about 20-minutes then, became dark again. Three of us were outside staring at the sky in pure amazement! The sun was also very much north of where it should have been and the clouds and colors where fascinating.
Aurora Australis lights up southern skies, seen from further north ...
Thu, 20 Feb 2014
The skies above Dunedin were lit up with a colourful aurora australis last night.
There were even reports the lights, caused by a geomagnetic storm, could be seen as far north as Manawatu.
Aurora australis, or the Southern Lights as they're also known, are usually only visible in the far south. They occur when charged particles, typically ejected from the sun, are captured by the Earth's magnetic field and are hurled towards the poles, colliding with molecules in the upper atmosphere.
Ian Griffin, director of the Otago Museum, snapped some shots of the lights from Strath Taieri, a plateau northwest of the city.
"No... it wasn't a dream," he wrote on his Twitter account. "There really was an amazing aurora australis last night seen over Dunedin."
While taking photos, another celestial phenomenon - a meteor - flew by.
"Meteor has temerity to intrude upon perfectly good shot of tonight's aurora," he wrote.
The range of colours are a result of the different concentrations of oxygen and nitrogen in various levels of the atmospherehttp://www.3news.co.nz/Aurora-lights-up-southern-skies/tabid/1160/a... , http://www.sott.net/article/274222-Aurora-Australis-lights-up-south...
In addition to this webcam catch from Mexico, at sunset, when the wobble caused a temporary brightening, reappearance of the Sun (http://poleshift.ning.com/profiles/blogs/earth-wobble-the-sky-in-me...) we now have this from Turkey.
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