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/sci/ - Science & Math


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15382333 No.15382333 [Reply] [Original]

nothing extraordinary, but not that common either
direct hit for sure, impact in 48-72 hours, geomagnetic storm expected

>> No.15382355

will miss, the sun rotates in 24 days, the earth orbits in 365 days.

>> No.15382400
File: 2.66 MB, 1024x576, sun.webm [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
15382400

>>15382333
How the sun actually looks like. It's local and not 93 gorillion miles away. It's more likely these "geomagnetic storms" are codeword for something else and not real storms since the sun is not some molten fusion reactor.

>> No.15382422

>>15382355
it won't miss at all
the CME has already been launched, and while the launch is indeed slanted due to the fast rotation of Sol it still hits a wide area
in this case we already have halo confirmation from LASCO, so it's not a question at all
>>15382400
go waste posts in someone else's thread, please

>> No.15382431

>>15382400
>How the sun actually looks like.
Ah yes, THIS is what he sun REALLY looks like. All the rest of the millions of pictures and videos of the sun are clearly all CGI or special effects purported by the jew lizard aliens from flat Jupiter.
>It's local and not 93 gorillion miles away.
So how far away is it? How hot is it? Why did it apparently not change size when I got 30,000 feet closer to it? Why doesn't it fall on top of us? What makes it rise?
>since the sun is not some molten fusion reactor
Then why is it hot? If it isn't hot then why is earth hot when the sun is in the sky?

>> No.15382439

>>15382431
well, I agree with them that it's not powered by fusion, but nothing else
what powers it in my opinion is interstellar Birkeland currents from the galactic current sheet, the galactic equivalent of the heliospheric current sheet, but with far larger currents

>> No.15382472

>>15382439
>what powers it in my opinion is interstellar Birkeland currents from the galactic current sheet, the galactic equivalent of the heliospheric current sheet, but with far larger currents
I'm not remotely smart enough to understand if this is an actual possibility, but I commend you on being able to think science might be wrong without going complete loony tunes.

>> No.15382494

>>15382400
The sun is real, smart guy. I know it's real because I stare directly at the sun without sunglasses for over an hour every day, studying it and it's movements. I've watched and studied it so much that i can even tell you it takes approximately 24 hours to go around the earth. Which is a bit strange that it knows how to line up with one day like that, but nevertheless, it's real

>> No.15382542
File: 2.27 MB, 640x360, sun2.webm [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
15382542

>>15382472
>>15382472
It's the emerging Electric Universe theory, unfortunately it's still based on the globohomo space model, which is completely invalidated. The earth is flat with a dome.

>> No.15382559
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15382559

>>15382542
Don't see any dome in your video, or any video for that matter. I've atleast got pictures of the earth's curve.

>> No.15382564

>>15382400
meds

>> No.15383849

OP here
halo CME confirmed, impact likely in ~36-60 hours
prepare for aurorae if you're at high latitudes
beware of earthquakes if you're in a region with a lot of faults

>> No.15383893

>>15382542
>The earth is flat with a dome.
anon
I want you to do a very simple experiment.
tie up a long thread and hang some sort of weight like a pen from it, observe it and try to explain what you see happen.

>> No.15383913

Is this likely to cause disruption to electrical grids?
If your location is facing away from the sun at time of impact will it be affected?

>> No.15384019

>>15383913
>Is this likely to cause disruption to electrical grids?
no, not at all, not even remotely energetic enough
2003 was a direct hit from an X17, and that hardly affected the grid at all, only a few hours of outages in a small part of Sweden and a few transformers blown in South Africa
and that was 100 times the peak flux of this one
this will just be some nice aurorae, maybe some slightly increased seismic activity in the most extreme cases, but that tends to happen with a time delay of at least one day
>If your location is facing away from the sun at time of impact will it be affected?
could be, because the ejecta will arrive spread over time, so elevated geomagnetic conditions can last for well over 12 hours
but again, the only effect you're likely to see from it is aurorae, and only if you live at high enough latitudes

>> No.15384686

OP here
estimated arrival time as per ENLIL is 24/04 at 06:00Z

>> No.15385951

>>15383913
>If your location is facing away from the sun at time of impact will it be affected?
The geomagnetic circuit effects all parts of the Earth at once.

>> No.15386334

>>15382333
very nice, super windy in norcal today

>> No.15388611

>>15386334
super Solar windy on Earth today
significant geomagnetic conditions right now, primarily from those CMEs, and possibly also from nearby coronal holes

>> No.15388634
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15388634

>>15388611
what effects do geomagnetic storms have? I noticed the NOAA xray thing is going crazy

>> No.15388658

>>15388634
>what effects do geomagnetic storms have?
for the most part, which is well-established, pretty lights in the sky, i.e. the aurorae
less well-established, but with a fair amount of evidence, is heightened seismic activity after a time delay, which can potentially trigger earthquakes in faults that are already on the verge of triggering
for more extreme storms there's also the potential for effects on electrical equipment, which is why you get a bunch of doomers screaming about that every time there are geomagnetic storms, but this typically requires very extreme conditions
satellites can be vulnerable under less extreme conditions, e.g. the Starlink satellites that got rekt, but it typically still requires a fair amount of activity

>> No.15389143

OP here
just spotted the aurora myself
the Bz just flipped south and conditions are still G4, fantastic opportunity to see aurorae right now well into mid-latitudes
look into the distance if they're not overhead (provided it's sufficiently dark outside where you live, soon best conditions will be Canada and US)