On this,
I have a photo printed in a UPI newspaper in 1980 which shows a NASA photo of
the Aurora Borealis. It is a black and white photo, which is of the earth
from above the north polar area, when the north pole area was on the dark
side of the earth. It shows the northern lights from above eminating from
the earth in an arc which measures 1200 miles in diameter, centered directly
at the north polar axis. This was printed in the newspaper picked up from
UPI, with a little blurb explaining what it was along with the perfect arc it
makes, which if completed would measure this 1200 mile diameter. Interesting?
Norlan
Norlan,
Is that photo scanable?
On this,
I have a photo printed in a UPI newspaper in 1980 which shows a NASA photo
of
the Aurora Borealis. It is a black and white photo, which is of the earth
from above the north polar area, when the north pole area was on the dark
side of the earth. It shows the northern lights from above eminating from
the earth in an arc which measures 1200 miles in diameter, centered
directly
at the north polar axis. This was printed in the newspaper picked up from
UPI, with a little blurb explaining what it was along with the perfect arc
it
makes, which if completed would measure this 1200 mile diameter.
Interesting?
Norlan
About the broken-arc photo which I got from Rod, I just think that on that
particular day, the particles were blowing in from the Sun a bit more
strongly and blew apart a side of the ring. Like Frode said, one example of
a thing doesn't prove much.
The fact that the arc was diffused so close to the opening is surprising,
though, since the particles emanating from the inner Earth would be
strongest at that point.
Dean