Posted on 06/04/2010 7:19:18 PM PDT by TaraP
One little sun spot.
One little sun spot.
‘Tis NOT!!!!
It must be.
In that graphic, earth has landed on some inhabited alien shore.
[we’re doomed]
Hey that 737 in the pic is Janet Airways from Area 51
Quick! Let’s immediately give money to the UN and Cap and Trade moguls to solve this massive planetary emergency!
Solar Weather is highly cyclical. Cycle 24 is long overdue.
But what they don’t say:
Being overdue suggests it will be very small. They were very, very late to concede this point, in spite of an incredible amount of evidence that it would be small. Nonetheless, a small cycle means far more severe solar weather than we’ve had since the previous peak in the late 1990s.
FWIW, sometimes we even skip cycles, as happened during the “Dalton Minimum,” which coincided with the “Little Ice Age.” Cycle 24 is so late, I was starting to think we might skip it. Apparently, it is on the way, now, however.
NASA need another seven astronauts. Err, 14 or is it 17? I forget.
NASA need another seven astronauts. Err, 14 or is it 17? I forget.
NASA need another seven astronauts. Err, 14 or is it 17? I forget.
Yup...
12/21/12
I hope, as they’re paying attention to the sun’s power in this regard, they’ll realize that we humans have precious little effect on our climate.
The normal solar cycle. The sun has been dormat, and getting more so since about 2001, now it's time for a wake up. Although the predicted "wake up" is pretty mild.
The sun even has a sunspot (group actually).
However wake ups have in the past not occurred as expected. This one seems to be on track as you can see above, but it's really too soon to tell.
The sun, and the rest of the solar system, is expected to enter a region of the galaxy with a relatively higher concentration of dust and gas than our present location, called the Local Fluff (heh I just report 'em I don't make 'em up) However we may already have done so, although it gets denser as you go in, but the density is not uniform even on the scale of the solar system. There are "clouds" and "voids" comparable in size to the solar system, but they get bigger and denser as you go into the "local fluff". Whether that will do much to the sun, I don't know, but it could have interesting "space weather" effects nonetheless, especially considering that the earth's magnetic field is waning, moving towards reversal of polarity, as it has done many times in the past. Not much happened those other times, but it's not known if we were in something like the "local fluff" at any of those times in the past.
bttt
Actually we’ve BEEN in a cold period for the last 10 years, due to decreased sunspot activity. At some point, the sun will get more active, which will increase the sunspot activity again, and warm the earth. And as the solar activity increases, the danger of Coronal Mass Ejections or ‘solar flares’ also increases.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.