OzarkMark
07-27-2004, 12:15 PM
this info is from the earth changes tv site on 7/26. i would not post this if
it weren't happening now, in real time. it seems important....-mark:
sunspot counts reached a high of 176 last week, and has been in triple
digits for over ten days. remember, nasa's 'cycle 23' prediction, of
which dr. hildner was one of the six person panel, presented cycle 23's
apex (maximum) at a sunspot count of 150. and this "apex" ended january
2001, meaning the very highest sunspot count we should have witnessed
ended over four years ago. i would suggest this blows the hell out of
any such prediction of a typical solar cycle.
okay, but what does this mean? it means we "are not" in a typical
eleven year solar cycle. we are in what i term a "mega cycle". a cycle
that supersedes a cycle. there is much speculation as to the precise
years involved. my theory suggest not decades or even centuries in
cycles, but thousands of years in cycle. exact number not known.
today's sunspot count is at 130, most likely coming from region 652.
the kp index <http://www.n3kl.org/sun/images/noaa_kp_3d.gif? is running
wild into the high 8's. this is not good news. the kp index measures
geomagnetic disturbances and can be monitored by ground-based magnetic
observatories recording the three magnetic field components. the global
kp index is obtained as the mean value of the disturbance levels in the
two horizontal field components, observed at 13 selected, subauroral
stations.
the name kp originates from "planetarische kennziffer" ( = planetary
index). in short, we are in for one hell of a geomagnetic storm. the
kind of which can blow out power grids, knock out satellites, and
disrupt communications. on the lighter side of this event, we should
see some very impressive auroras. i will give it a 50/50 chance of
coming down to lower latitudes. perhaps around 40ãƒâƒã‚âƒãƒâ‚ã‚âƒãƒâƒã‚â‚ãƒâ‚ã‚âƒãƒâƒã‚âƒãƒâ‚ã‚â‚ ãƒâƒã‚â‚ãƒâ‚ã‚â‚ãƒâƒã‚âƒãƒâ‚ã‚âƒãƒâƒã‚â‚ãƒâ‚ã‚â‚ムâƒã‚âƒãƒâ‚ã‚â‚ãƒâƒã‚â‚ãƒâ‚ã‚â° 0' n which puts it
in colorado.
watch for alerts telling of power outages in the next 48 to 72 hours.
also there will be continued "extreme weather" which will produce
"record" highs. also a good chance of sudden wind storms in the way of
tornadoes, wind shears, micro-burst, and straight-line winds.
four m-class flares have fired off in just the last 24 hours, with one
m8 flare. folks, simply put, it is getting really nasty. i will give
one more percentage prediction. i give a 60/40 chance we will witness
an x-class flare within the next 48 hours. the overriding question
remains...."what is causing this unusual sequence of solar events? yes,
it is part of a "mega cycle", but what are the components which
contribute to the cause of such cycles the earth has seen many times
before? perhaps in our lifetime, we will have the answer.
much more to come.....
earth changes tv 'radio hour'
[non-text portions of this message have been removed]
it weren't happening now, in real time. it seems important....-mark:
sunspot counts reached a high of 176 last week, and has been in triple
digits for over ten days. remember, nasa's 'cycle 23' prediction, of
which dr. hildner was one of the six person panel, presented cycle 23's
apex (maximum) at a sunspot count of 150. and this "apex" ended january
2001, meaning the very highest sunspot count we should have witnessed
ended over four years ago. i would suggest this blows the hell out of
any such prediction of a typical solar cycle.
okay, but what does this mean? it means we "are not" in a typical
eleven year solar cycle. we are in what i term a "mega cycle". a cycle
that supersedes a cycle. there is much speculation as to the precise
years involved. my theory suggest not decades or even centuries in
cycles, but thousands of years in cycle. exact number not known.
today's sunspot count is at 130, most likely coming from region 652.
the kp index <http://www.n3kl.org/sun/images/noaa_kp_3d.gif? is running
wild into the high 8's. this is not good news. the kp index measures
geomagnetic disturbances and can be monitored by ground-based magnetic
observatories recording the three magnetic field components. the global
kp index is obtained as the mean value of the disturbance levels in the
two horizontal field components, observed at 13 selected, subauroral
stations.
the name kp originates from "planetarische kennziffer" ( = planetary
index). in short, we are in for one hell of a geomagnetic storm. the
kind of which can blow out power grids, knock out satellites, and
disrupt communications. on the lighter side of this event, we should
see some very impressive auroras. i will give it a 50/50 chance of
coming down to lower latitudes. perhaps around 40ãƒâƒã‚âƒãƒâ‚ã‚âƒãƒâƒã‚â‚ãƒâ‚ã‚âƒãƒâƒã‚âƒãƒâ‚ã‚â‚ ãƒâƒã‚â‚ãƒâ‚ã‚â‚ãƒâƒã‚âƒãƒâ‚ã‚âƒãƒâƒã‚â‚ãƒâ‚ã‚â‚ムâƒã‚âƒãƒâ‚ã‚â‚ãƒâƒã‚â‚ãƒâ‚ã‚â° 0' n which puts it
in colorado.
watch for alerts telling of power outages in the next 48 to 72 hours.
also there will be continued "extreme weather" which will produce
"record" highs. also a good chance of sudden wind storms in the way of
tornadoes, wind shears, micro-burst, and straight-line winds.
four m-class flares have fired off in just the last 24 hours, with one
m8 flare. folks, simply put, it is getting really nasty. i will give
one more percentage prediction. i give a 60/40 chance we will witness
an x-class flare within the next 48 hours. the overriding question
remains...."what is causing this unusual sequence of solar events? yes,
it is part of a "mega cycle", but what are the components which
contribute to the cause of such cycles the earth has seen many times
before? perhaps in our lifetime, we will have the answer.
much more to come.....
earth changes tv 'radio hour'
[non-text portions of this message have been removed]