The basic problem is the behaviour of waves in general. There is now
way for them to keep their enegies undivided. They have to obey an
inverse square law as the circle of force expands. And there is
another thing caused by pressure:
On the surface a floating object desribes a perfect circle in captured
rotation, that is the object moves foreward as it rises and then
backwards as it drops off a wave.
Just under the surface, the object would desribe an elipse.
Deeper down it would be a very marked elongation.
And finally, near the floor the movement would be just plain "back and
forth" (or forth and back rather.)
Obviously I am at fault.
Or not as the case is, most likely.
A similar phenomenon dogs the NCAR explanation of the atmosphere as
given by the Encyclopaedia Britannica. No takers there either. No
Department of Meteorology is going to take them on, I fear.
So it's down to me then, I take it.
And I will I suppose.
Ho hum.
South America forms a Cardioid curve from the rough parallelogramme of
its coastline. The inner centres of the stuff I drew focussed on the
lightning and seismic zones. Maybe I will have to try again?
> http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Cardioid.html
> http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Limacon.html
Africa on the other hand forms a rams-horn conchoid centring on its
lightning and seismic core which are both in the same area.
Too sweet.
Just off to see if I can find a diagramme for the
AustraliaAustralasian and AfricaEurAsian butterflies.
Maybe > http://mathworld.wolfram.com/CartesianOvals.html ?
Talking of butterflies, the lawrentian stuff goes well with polar jets
in meteorology see hydraulic jump. In pneumodynamics the state falls
into different studdies acoustics and ballistics and getting pretty
diagrammes is difficult due the amount of data available.
Meanwhile I am stuck with the kitchen sink.
Where do I start...
Let's see...
The five day wave of storms over Africa might be an interference
pattern with the two body problem called Earth's barycentre and the
Earth's daily rotation.
And the time of the lunar phase of course -but you already knew that,
didn't you children?
Damn.
I have eaten all my toffees!
The 26 Dec 2004 Banda Atjeh quake produced a severe wave that hilled
an estimated 1/4 million earthwide. 10 years or so prior to the event
a serious flaw in warnings was instituted when the local bods sacked a
marine physicist for issuing a warning for a tsunami that failed to
materialise.
I believe that 50000 people are still unaccounted for. (Not likely to
turn up in droves now though.)
At one place the locals found the temperature of the water in the wave
was high. They used the term hot water. Considering they were a marine
based economy, I imagine the comparison would be accurate. Those
living inshore and not used to the feel of local conditions in the sea
would hardly be mindful of the temperature of the inundation, would
they?
The exponential spiral that Africa (and I now find S America also)
fits the golden mean. That is the exponent can be simplified with self
similar rectangles; the centre found by drawing a perpendicular (90
degree) line from one curve to the next.
The problem is with perspective as the outline depends on sea level
and stretches across quite a region of a sphere.
Not to worry, it turns out to be a rhumb-line, a mathematical model
used in navigation. So there are tables worked out for it. That's
prior to the era of the desk top computer, that is.
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spiral
> http://www.2dcurves.com/alphabetae.html
Nice one God.
Humungous structure lists here: > http://www.2dcurves.com/alphabetae.html
Felix
El Fix
Hi. Just a brief reminder: you said that last time.
I have no objection to you felixation maybe you caught your head in a
toilet during that 6.3M in Northridge a decade or so back. (Happy
birthday BTW) and you feel the need to take it out on the alpha males
in residence.
I hope you are beta.
It can't be easy being an elf in a man's world. Shouldn't you have
moved to San Francisco?
Here's wishing you mary new year and a nappy sickmess. Get over it.
Half un.
http://neic.usgs.gov/neis/recent/ci14883196_l.html
route choice A but I felt the irrational pressing need to get on with
it and went on up and over to San Diego.
Fed pavement running over the State Park property on the Border
Patrol, county line, is uncreased form this fault running thru it.
Borrego is the largest state park in US ?
A 3.7M.?
You are kidding, right?