Sky maps: May 31, June 1, 2, 3, 4. www.spaceweather.com
Any night this week, step outside after midnight and look south. You'll see Jupiter, Saturn and Mars arranged in a bright line across the starry sky. The Moon can be your guide. It's hopping from one planet to the next with beautiful conjunctions on June 1st (Moon-Saturn) and especially June 3rd (Moon-Mars). Enjoy the show!
Sky maps: May 31, June 1, 2, 3, 4. www.spaceweather.com
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A small body of determined spirits
fired by an unquenchable faith in their mission can alter the course of history. ~ Mohandas Gandhi Dear Akash - From Kryon Live Channelling: "Instructing the Akash" March 2018 in Phoenix, AZ Dear Akash that is my essence, and represents the expressions of thousands of lives on this planet, look at the energy of today, because I am in charge. Dear Akash, beautiful that you are because you are me, and represent the one soul that I have been for thousands of lifetimes on this earth, know this: there is change and I am going to dictate it because I am in charge. ~ KRYON, through Lee Carroll, the Original Kryon Channel Read full channelling here.
Lisa Grossman; Science News; 30 April 2018 It was the eclipse felt 'round the world'. The August 21, 2017, total solar eclipse that crossed the United States launched a wave in the upper atmosphere that was detected nearly an hour later from Brazil (SN Online: 8/11/17). "The eclipse itself is a local phenomenon, but our study shows that it had effects around the world," says space scientist Brian Harding of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Harding watched the eclipse from St. Louis. But he and his colleagues activated a probe near São João do Cariri, Brazil, to observe uncharged particles 250 kilometers high in a part of the atmosphere called the thermosphere. The probe recorded a fast-moving wave in the thermosphere go by half an hour after sunset in São João do Cariri and 55 minutes after the end of the total eclipse, the team reported April 24 in Geophysical Research Letters. The wave is produced by the motion of the moon's shadow, which cooled the atmosphere below it. That cold spot then acted like a sink, sucking in the warmer air ahead of it and causing a ripple in the atmosphere as the cold spot moved across the globe. Previous eclipses also have launched waves at similar altitudes in the ionosphere, the charged plasma of the atmosphere, which overlaps with the electrically neutral thermosphere (SN Online: 8/13/17). This is the first time that scientists have observed a wave in the uncharged part of the atmosphere. Neutral particles are 100 to 1,000 times denser than plasma in the atmosphere, and it's important to know how they behave too, Harding says. Science News: Published on Apr 30, 2018 This simulation predicts the atmosphere’s response to a solar eclipse. Color shows how temperature changes, and black lines trace motion in the atmosphere. The moon’s shadow cooled the atmosphere, producing a large wave that was visible from a research station in Brazil (black square) after the eclipse had ended. Read more: https://www.sciencenews.org/article/g... Credit: B.J. Harding et al/Geophysical Research Letters 2018. Half a world away: the above simulation predicts the atmosphere's response to a solar eclipse.
https://www.sott.net/article/384617-Last-years-solar-eclipse-set-off-a-wave-in-the-upper-atmosphere-that-was-detected-as-far-away-as-Brazil |
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_Messenger Spirit _This section is for interesting items which are brought to my attention but which do not merit a separate article.
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