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Anyone seen discussion regarding whether composite skin e.g. 787 offers less protection than aluminum? Do crew regularly flying polar carry dosimeters?
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Oh dear, not another one, got killed in the last one I did. :(
Oh, got better. :p |
Scotty!
Scotty! Energize proton deflector shields immediately!
Aye, aye captain! |
You are all silly.
Both of our dogs are glowing. This is real. |
there was certainly wonkiness in satellite reception and I had difficulty in using the satellite phone. Even the satellite TV reception was intermittent for awhile This could be very good news - solar storm affecting satellite tv... does it mean the SKY box at Prestwick will be working this weekend?!! :} |
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Don't know what all the fuss is about.
Down here, we've had nothing but glowing reports! |
Don't blame Solar Flares for everything.......:8
EQUINOX SUN OUTAGES SpaceWeather.com Download time: Mar 7 2011 12:50 PM ET Many readers reported an intermittent loss of satellite TV reception over the weekend. Was the sun to blame? Yes and no. Senior forecaster Bill Murtagh of NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center explains: "It is likely that the sun caused the problem, but not because of solar flares. Now is the time of year for the 'equinox conjunction,' when the sun lines up with the satellite and the receiving satellite dish. When this happens, radio interference from the sun competes with signals from the satellite and can create noise levels several decibels higher than normal. The problem, which typically persists for 5 to 15 minutes, is referred to as a 'sun outage' and is often confused with sunspot or solar flare activity." |
Kelly Hopper
I will see your remote viewer and raise you mine :)
Remote Viewers predict 2012/2013 meteor impact :rolleyes: |
My bad, it fizzled out. No drama, sorry folks the story's over for the time being.
Anyway, the upside is this awesome display of the Northern Lights: PhotoBlog - Solar storm lights up northern skies |
Wolf! Wolf!
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Remote viewing and suchlike
Credit to these flim-flam pseudo scientists for scamming the military for so long, gosh think of all those dollars ! not sure it would work in the UK though :=
remote viewing - The Skeptic's Dictionary - Skepdic.com |
I am not a scaremonger, but the recent global warming trends and so called climate change are clear signs of hyper solar activity that affected the core temperature of Earth. |
It is not the radiation but the Chemtrails, you have to worry about. :uhoh:
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No Chemtrails - - Shortwave COM impacted ?
well, the stuff from the sun is here, arrived yesterday, and seems to impact shortwave
communiction a lot. click here for an overview: SW for Aviation Service Providers click here for the HF com prediction: SWPC - D-RAP Global (5 MHz) lots of red, high absorbtion in the North...and South. Anyone around who can tell if the red is real, if HF is bad or out in the North ? Best, Klaus |
Came across the ocean last night at 56N. HF worked, CPDLC worked, northern lights visible for a short time.
The HF was a little temperament going westbound the previous day (Wednesday). There were some areas with no reception at 62N between Iceland and Greenland. |
Didn't notice anything in southern UK. HF ham bands seemed OK but they sometimes go out for a few hours with solar flares..
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After the volcanic ash fiasco I was 1/2 expecting airspace closures and a/c grounded just in case the whole ATC & GPS system crumbled under the violent onslaught of mother nature. Hollywood's next disaster movie is in the making and some airlines are already lining up the next pax supplement for unforseen disaster taxes. Trans polar crews were issued with lead vests, but don't tell the pax. Pregnant C/A's were stood down, and any pax with pace makers were refused boarding. The worst fall out from all this was the inflight mobile phone system might fail. Heavens to murgatroid! We're all going to die, or worse still the baggage will end up somewhere else.
If I hear correctly it was all a ripple on the mill pond; but is there a sting in the tail waiting for us; a little like vortices of finals send a shiver through the trees a few moments after the passage of the heavy jet. Batten down the hatches for a few more days. |
One big-- and probably the neatest-- side effect was a major aurora outbreak:
Solar storm and aurora update March 7-8 Solar storm and aurora update March 7-8 | Astro Bob Heavy clouds and rainstorm down here (Lat N33*) so I have no idea how far south it got. --Bill |
Thanks for the info on that NAT-crossing. Would not have expected effects on the 7.,
and would have thought that there was more of a problem on the return. Klaus |
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