Re: Why the sun is hot
- From: "oriel36" <geraldkelleher@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: 22 Jul 2006 03:55:17 -0700
Well Eugene,I am not really surprised that you do not reference your
website insofar as you would get a hostile reception for your belief
that the Earth rotates at 15 degrees per hour even though that is
correct.
http://www.dynagen.co.za/eugene/where/index.html
This stuff can get you ostracised like poor Doink who had the audacity
to appreciate that the intuitive intelligence which is required to
experiance and affirm that a greater existence encompasses our temporal
existence is the same intuitive intelligence which appreciates
astronomy,its methods and its insights.
Military and cowardice do not go hand in hand,in your case it proves
the exception and there is no worse fate than that.Either stick with a
celestial sphere determination or do not but do not behave like a
undiciplined child and try to work with both.
Eugene Griessel wrote:
brian@xxxxxxx (Brian Tung) wrote:
T.T. wrote:
Why the Sun is hot.
The distance from the Earth to the Sun is about 94 million miles.
The Sun circles the Earth once every 24 hours in a roughly circular orbit.
(these are old figures, but once had the authority of the Church to support
them)
The length of this circular orbit is roughly 587 million miles.
Therefore the speed of the Sun as it circles the Earth is roughly 24 million
miles per hour.
Anything travelling at this speed, as the Sun has done for the last 6000
years, must get hot.
Q.E.D.
But the Sun's distance is closer to 93 million miles. Therefore your
argument falls apart, the Sun is in fact cold, and we don't exist.
Q.E.D. (Quod Erat Delendum)
C'mon gentlemen - how about a bit of good old maths here - the
difference is 24.347342 million miles per hour versus 24.609141
million miles per hour.
A mere 0.261799 million miles per hour cannot account for the
extreme difference in temperatures postulated by Mr Tung. Nonetheless
the coefficient of friction of the medium the sun is racing through
would be good to have - as would the roughness of the surface of the
sun. Why dismiss a fine theory on a trivial point like a slight
discrepancy in mean oribital distance?
Excuse me - one of the druids is calling for me to participate in a
sacrificial ceremony......
Eugene L Griessel
Many people quit looking for work when they find a job.
.
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