Saturday, July 24, 2021

A Sense of Magnitude

Posts from the Past.

An interesting article about the return of sunspots in the solar cycle from spaceweather.com for July 14, 2010.

Sunspot 1087





Here is a closer look at 1087 comparing the size of the spot to the Earth





From the article:
The active region could swallow our planet ten times over and still have room to spare. Fortunately, we're 93 million miles away. We could still feel the effects of an eruption, however. The thicket of magnetic loops and filaments harbors energy for M-class solar flares. M-flares can heat and puff up Earth's upper atmosphere, causing satellites to experience extra drag as they orbit our planet; they can also cause waves of ionization to ripple around the planet, disrupting radio communications.

Do you really think that our burning of fossil fuels is all that significant to global temperature?  It is easy to magnify one's significance from the inside looking out but true relevance is determined from the outside looking in.

Awesome beauty.

My guess at a translation is:  kids can look up stuff on the internet that can't be trusted so they should rely on their fellow kids', parents', and relatives' vast knowledge of contagious diseases and follow blindly along and take the shot that won't keep them protected but makes them good and obedient little subjects to the state.