UK Karting

Notice Board (Combined Forum)




you know I'm right, here's your proof
Posted by 'singers' on 03 Nov 2008 @ 19:47


| View Message Thread | Reply to this message |
singers
Joined: April 2003
Total Posts: 1
[ View User Profile ]
or why would you be asking intelligent questions about what I know about the Sun.

is the penny finally dropping!? hurray!

I'll take it then that every time from now you mention Philip Pullman it's because you're running scared and you have to bring out that old chestnut to discredit me as really thats the only think you have!

The Sun's 23rd cycle peaked in 2002 and has been declining since culminating in very low activity in 2008 (August being the month where no sunspots were recorded).

http://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/hotshots/2007_12_02/

here's the chapter and verse in one article, are you going to argue with NASA! probably!:

RELEASE : 08-241


Ulysses Reveals Global Solar Wind Plasma Output At 50-Year Low


WASHINGTON -- Data from the Ulysses spacecraft, a joint NASA-European Space Agency mission, show the sun has reduced its output of solar wind to the lowest levels since accurate readings became available. The sun's current state could reduce the natural shielding that envelops our solar system.

"The sun's million mile-per-hour solar wind inflates a protective bubble, or heliosphere, around the solar system. It influences how things work here on Earth and even out at the boundary of our solar system where it meets the galaxy," said Dave McComas, Ulysses' solar wind instrument principal investigator and senior executive director at the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio. "Ulysses data indicate the solar wind's global pressure is the lowest we have seen since the beginning of the space age."

The sun's solar wind plasma is a stream of charged particles ejected from the sun's upper atmosphere. The solar wind interacts with every planet in our solar system. It also defines the border between our solar system and interstellar space.
This border, called the heliopause, surrounds our solar system where the solar wind's strength is no longer great enough to push back the wind of other stars. The region around the heliopause also acts as a shield for our solar system, warding off a significant portion of the cosmic rays outside the galaxy.

"Galactic cosmic rays carry with them radiation from other parts of our galaxy," said Ed Smith, NASA's Ulysses project scientist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. "With the solar wind at an all-time low, there is an excellent chance the heliosphere will diminish in size and strength. If that occurs, more galactic cosmic rays will make it into the inner part of our solar system."

Galactic cosmic rays are of great interest to NASA. Cosmic rays are linked to engineering decisions for unmanned interplanetary spacecraft and exposure limits for astronauts traveling beyond low-Earth orbit.

In 2007, Ulysses made its third rapid scan of the solar wind and magnetic field from the sun's south to north pole. When the results were compared with observations from the previous solar cycle, the strength of the solar wind pressure and the magnetic field embedded in the solar wind were found to have decreased by 20 percent. The field strength near the spacecraft has decreased by 36 percent.
"The sun cycles between periods of great activity and lesser activity," Smith said. "Right now, we are in a period of minimal activity that has stretched on longer than anyone anticipated."

Ulysses was the first mission to survey the space environment over the sun's poles. Data Ulysses has returned have forever changed the way scientists view our star and its effects. The venerable spacecraft has lasted more than 18 years, or almost four times its expected mission lifetime. The Ulysses solar wind findings were published in a recent edition of Geophysical Research Letters.

The Ulysses spacecraft was carried into Earth orbit aboard space shuttle Discovery on Oct. 6, 1990. From Earth orbit it was propelled toward Jupiter, passing the planet on Feb. 8, 1992. Jupiter's immense gravity bent the spacecraft's flight path downward and away from the plane of the planets' orbits. This placed Ulysses into a final orbit around the sun that would take it over its north and south poles.

The Ulysses spacecraft was provided by ESA, having been built by Astrium GmbH (formerly Dornier Systems) of Friedrichshafen, Germany. NASA provided the launch vehicle and the upper stage boosters. The U.S. Department of Energy supplied a radioisotope thermoelectric generator to power the spacecraft. Science instruments were provided by U.S. and European investigators. The spacecraft is operated from JPL by a joint NASA-ESA team.

More information about the Ulysses mission is available on the Web at:

http://ulysses.jpl.nasa.gov

Message Thread:

dark matter  by 'singers'   (23 Oct 2008 @ 16:14)
Re: dark matter  by 'itpro'   (23 Oct 2008 @ 18:17)
Re: dark matter  by 'kudos'   (24 Oct 2008 @ 1:21)
Re: dark matter  by 'singers'   (24 Oct 2008 @ 9:05)
Re: dark matter  by 'itpro'   (24 Oct 2008 @ 10:55)
Victor Bouqet! ha ha  by 'singers'   (24 Oct 2008 @ 14:50)
Dark Matter  by 'Gillard77'   (24 Oct 2008 @ 15:03)
Re: Victor Bouqet! ha ha  by 'itpro'   (24 Oct 2008 @ 16:58)
Re: Victor Bouqet! blinkers! ha ha ha ha ha ha  by 'singers'   (24 Oct 2008 @ 17:28)
Re: Victor Bouqet! blinkers! ha ha ha ha ha ha  by 'itpro'   (24 Oct 2008 @ 17:49)
Alf Garnett, lol  by 'singers'   (25 Oct 2008 @ 10:14)
Singers  by 'itpro'   (27 Oct 2008 @ 10:36)
Re: Singers? No reply? Quelle surprise!  by 'itpro'   (28 Oct 2008 @ 18:14)
Re: Singers? No reply? Quelle surprise!  by 'RoadRat'   (28 Oct 2008 @ 19:03)
Re: Singers? No reply? Quelle surprise!  by 'itpro'   (28 Oct 2008 @ 20:12)
.... continued  by 'itpro'   (28 Oct 2008 @ 20:20)
Re: .... continued  by 'RoadRat'   (28 Oct 2008 @ 20:55)
Road Rat  by 'itpro'   (29 Oct 2008 @ 0:14)
why bother! falls on deaf ears!  by 'singers'   (31 Oct 2008 @ 16:28)
As you'd expect form Singers.....  by 'itpro'   (31 Oct 2008 @ 18:13)
same OLD same OLD  by 'singers'   (31 Oct 2008 @ 22:16)
Re: same OLD same OLD  by 'itpro'   (02 Nov 2008 @ 12:31)
you don't half took rot  by 'singers'   (31 Oct 2008 @ 22:35)
Re: you don't half took rot  by 'itpro'   (02 Nov 2008 @ 12:37)
SUN SUN SUN SUN!!!! well done Lewis  by 'singers'   (03 Nov 2008 @ 9:04)
Re: SUN SUN SUN SUN!!!! well done Lewis  by 'itpro'   (03 Nov 2008 @ 11:22)
you know I'm right, here's your proof  by 'singers'  << You are here!
Re: you know I'm right, here's your proof  by 'itpro'   (04 Nov 2008 @ 1:37)
Ha ha ha! Thats a good'un!  by 'vic'   (04 Nov 2008 @ 8:57)
Oh.... Vic, you ain't seen the NEXT one!  by 'itpro'   (04 Nov 2008 @ 10:39)
you're BOTH wrong again!  by 'singers'   (04 Nov 2008 @ 12:03)
Re: you're BOTH wrong again!  by 'itpro'   (04 Nov 2008 @ 17:48)
Singers.......  by 'vic'   (24 Oct 2008 @ 17:57)
Re: Singers.......  by 'brinjono'   (24 Oct 2008 @ 19:02)
nope!  by 'singers'   (25 Oct 2008 @ 10:20)
Re: nope!  by 'vic'   (25 Oct 2008 @ 13:22)
Don't forget Alf Garnett  by 'RoadRat'   (24 Oct 2008 @ 19:51)
Re: Don't forget Alf Garnett  by 'singers'   (25 Oct 2008 @ 10:53)
Re: Don't forget Alf Garnett  by 'itpro'   (27 Oct 2008 @ 10:39)
Itpro & Singers  by 'Canceric'   (02 Nov 2008 @ 1:30)
Re: Itpro & Singers  by 'itpro'   (02 Nov 2008 @ 12:41)
Re: Itpro & Singers  by 'Canceric'   (02 Nov 2008 @ 15:25)
Re: Itpro & Singers  by 'itpro'   (03 Nov 2008 @ 11:57)
canceric  by 'singers'   (03 Nov 2008 @ 19:55)
Re: canceric  by 'itpro'   (04 Nov 2008 @ 1:47)
Re: canceric  by 'mobilechicane'   (04 Nov 2008 @ 6:55)
mobilechicane  by 'singers'   (04 Nov 2008 @ 12:21)
Re: mobilechicane  by 'itpro'   (04 Nov 2008 @ 17:50)
singers....  by 'vic'   (04 Nov 2008 @ 20:40)

Post a Reply:
You may post a direct reply to this message which will appear in this thread.
To post a new or unrelated message use This Form.
Reply To "Re: you know I'm right, here's your proof"
Email Address :   Not Registered? Click Here to register...
Password :   Passwords are Case Sensitive!   [ Password Lookup ]
Message Title / Subject :
Message :
Options : Subscribe to this thread?   [ More Information ]

Top of Page
Notice Board Index

[ UK Karting Main Index ]


News Karts and Karting Notice Board Market Place Companies Directory Tracks Directory Events Calendar Race Results Photo Gallery Links
News Karts &
Karting
Notice
Board
Market
Place
Companies
Directory
Tracks
Directory
Events
Calendar
Race
Results
Photo
Gallery
Links

UK Karting

Copyright © 1996-2018 UK Karting
Comments, Suggestions etc. mail@karting.co.uk