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7/16/2025, 1:34:25 AM
>>510491656
What if the Epstein fiasco is a distraction from something else?
What if the Epstein fiasco is a distraction from something else?
7/3/2025, 10:06:15 PM
>>509424538
This came to light in 1956 when Andre Danjon detected a sudden deceleration of Earth's rotation following a solar flare.
A repeat performance then took place in 1960.
The explosion on the face of the Sun caused quite a bit of havoc down here on Earth.
Six hours (after the flare), a gigantic cloud of solar hydrogen gas, ten million miles across and still trailing halfway back to the Sun, 93 million miles away, collided with the Earth at a speed of four thousand miles a second. Though inaudible and invisible, the collision started a violent chain of disturbances on and around the Earth, an electric and magnetic storm of mammoth proportions. Compass needles swerved erratically. For hours, all long-distance radio communications were blacked out. Teletypes printed gibberish.
Overhead, sheets of flaming red northern lights flashed in the night sky, bright enough to be seen through overcast and clouds.
Electric lights flickered in farmhouses as if a thunderstorm raged, yet the air and sky were clear and silent.
This state of affairs continued for more than a week, such a storm amounts to no more than a tiny ripple in the usual steady flow of solar energy.
Earth was also slowed down, and the length of the day again increased.
True enough, as before, it did not increase by much, only by 0.85 milliseconds, thereafter decreasing at the rate of 3.7 microseconds per day.
Earths rotation eventually stabilized close to its pre-flare value.
To say that Danjon took scientists by surprise would be putting it mildly.
This came to light in 1956 when Andre Danjon detected a sudden deceleration of Earth's rotation following a solar flare.
A repeat performance then took place in 1960.
The explosion on the face of the Sun caused quite a bit of havoc down here on Earth.
Six hours (after the flare), a gigantic cloud of solar hydrogen gas, ten million miles across and still trailing halfway back to the Sun, 93 million miles away, collided with the Earth at a speed of four thousand miles a second. Though inaudible and invisible, the collision started a violent chain of disturbances on and around the Earth, an electric and magnetic storm of mammoth proportions. Compass needles swerved erratically. For hours, all long-distance radio communications were blacked out. Teletypes printed gibberish.
Overhead, sheets of flaming red northern lights flashed in the night sky, bright enough to be seen through overcast and clouds.
Electric lights flickered in farmhouses as if a thunderstorm raged, yet the air and sky were clear and silent.
This state of affairs continued for more than a week, such a storm amounts to no more than a tiny ripple in the usual steady flow of solar energy.
Earth was also slowed down, and the length of the day again increased.
True enough, as before, it did not increase by much, only by 0.85 milliseconds, thereafter decreasing at the rate of 3.7 microseconds per day.
Earths rotation eventually stabilized close to its pre-flare value.
To say that Danjon took scientists by surprise would be putting it mildly.
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