Re: Astronomers Vs Harrison (clock maker) ref Longitude problem
- From: "oriel36" <geraldkelleher@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: 13 Nov 2005 09:27:03 -0800
Jonathan Silverlight wrote:
> In message <GqHdf.8950$mF5.1932@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Ron Larham
> <larhamr@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes
> >
> >"oriel36" <geraldkelleher@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
> >news:1131880795.284828.20310@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> >>
> >> Craig Oldfield wrote:
> >
> >[SNIP]
> >
> >> Even when it is pointed out to you that a star returns to the
> >> same
> >> position in 23 hours 56 min 04 sec of a 24 hour day and this is
> >> fine as
> >> long as you do NOT attempt to justify it astronomically
> >
> > I beg you pardon!?
> >
> > It is an astronomical observation.
> >
> >RonL
> >
> >
> You possibly haven't seen Gerald's posts on this, which go back years
> and have yet to provide anything that wasn't in the very first one.
> There's nobody home.
Without the correct value for axial rotation ,the relationship with
orbital motion withers.
None of you will dare defend your ridiculous sidereal view because it
highlights you as the same cretinous people that made Harrison's life
miserable and destroyed the exquisite reasoning of the astronomical
giants such as Copernicus,Kepler and Roemer.
For the first time in centuries I have explained how the pre-Copernican
principles of the 24 hour day emerge from the equalising noon Equation
of Time correction.
As you are simpletons and imagine that there is a constant rotation to
the Sun every 24 hours exactly and from there to the cataloguing
sidereal value of 23 hours 56 min 04 sec,no wonder you lot are heavy on
insults and short on technical details.
Let me demonstrate how stupid you are -
24 hours = 360 degrees
4 min = 1 degree
3 min 56 sec = .986 deg
24 hours 56 sec minus 3 min 56 sec = 23 hours 56 sec 04 sec
Then you freaks combine axial rotation with orbital motion and come up
with this monster -
http://www.pfm.howard.edu/astronomy/Chaisson/AT401/IMAGES/AACHCIR0.JPG
You and everyone else here will use the ancient principles which fix
the equable hour ,min and sec from the noon correction and the
heliocentric adaption to axial rotation at 15 degrees per hour exactly
even though you spend you useless existence denying the principle -
http://hypertextbook.com/facts/1999/JennyChen.shtml
Hug your telescopes and talk of the Sun and planets rising and setting
but whereas the geocentrists produced useful principles that were
adapted to heliocentricity,everything withers under your brute
handling.
.
- References:
- Astronomers Vs Harrison (clock maker) ref Longitude problem
- From: Hayley
- Re: Astronomers Vs Harrison (clock maker) ref Longitude problem
- From: Andrew Robert Breen
- Re: Astronomers Vs Harrison (clock maker) ref Longitude problem
- From: eugene
- Re: Astronomers Vs Harrison (clock maker) ref Longitude problem
- From: oriel36
- Re: Astronomers Vs Harrison (clock maker) ref Longitude problem
- From: eugene
- Re: Astronomers Vs Harrison (clock maker) ref Longitude problem
- From: oriel36
- Re: Astronomers Vs Harrison (clock maker) ref Longitude problem
- From: Craig Oldfield
- Re: Astronomers Vs Harrison (clock maker) ref Longitude problem
- From: oriel36
- Re: Astronomers Vs Harrison (clock maker) ref Longitude problem
- From: oriel36
- Re: Astronomers Vs Harrison (clock maker) ref Longitude problem
- From: Craig Oldfield
- Re: Astronomers Vs Harrison (clock maker) ref Longitude problem
- From: oriel36
- Re: Astronomers Vs Harrison (clock maker) ref Longitude problem
- From: Craig Oldfield
- Re: Astronomers Vs Harrison (clock maker) ref Longitude problem
- From: oriel36
- Re: Astronomers Vs Harrison (clock maker) ref Longitude problem
- From: Ron Larham
- Re: Astronomers Vs Harrison (clock maker) ref Longitude problem
- From: Jonathan Silverlight
- Astronomers Vs Harrison (clock maker) ref Longitude problem
- Prev by Date: Re: Astronomers Vs Harrison (clock maker) ref Longitude problem
- Next by Date: Re: Gross Misconduct
- Previous by thread: Re: Astronomers Vs Harrison (clock maker) ref Longitude problem
- Next by thread: Re: Astronomers Vs Harrison (clock maker) ref Longitude problem
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|
Loading