Dreamtime
Perth Western Australia
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136 of 239
Thu 21st Jan 2016 1:48am
On 19th Jan 2016 10:45pm, PhiliPamInCoventry said: The same as our moon does to us, causing the tides as well as distorting our globe. I don't pretend to understand all of the sciences involved, but it does not stop my fascination of the universe that we live in.
Absolutely fascinating, but at the same time rather frightening realising how vulnerable we are at the mercy of the planets. Perhaps sometime in the future other life forms will make themselves known. We are here on earth, I can't see any reason why there isn't other life forms, maybe of a different kind, somewhere else in the universe.
Hey Philip, they may have discovered bacon butties long before you did
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Non-Coventry -
Astronomy, The Sky and Outer Space
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flapdoodle
Coventry
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137 of 239
Thu 21st Jan 2016 8:47pm
On 21st Jan 2016 12:29am, wizard76 said:
I think the Universe had to be designed, any system which has fixed unified laws that allow our planetary system to function with such mathematical certainty, that scientists can predict where a planet will be in a thousand years time, is pure evidence of a intelligent designer, and not blind chance.
It is nothing of the sort. It's a 'God of the gaps' fallacy.
i.e. we don't know why there are 'universal laws', therefore there must be a 'God'.
And it's also not true. The 'laws of nature' may well vary across the Universe, there is evidence that this is the case. |
Non-Coventry -
Astronomy, The Sky and Outer Space
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PhiliPamInCoventry
Holbrooks
Thread starter
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138 of 239
Fri 21st Oct 2016 9:33am
Hi all
If this is true - a giant outer planet - it pulls a well-held law regards the distribution of the planets. All of the known planets fit into a cigar shape, smallest at either end with the biggest in the middle. If we do have another giant, clinging to our sun's gravitational field, so far out, the question beggars whether it is an orphan from another planetary system. This is not a new subject either. I listened to a lecture at the Technical College theatre in 1965 where there was speculation about what was causing additional wobbles.
PS. I was awake in the early hours watching "The Orionids" - no not the latest rock group, a meteor shower cluster. |
Non-Coventry -
Astronomy, The Sky and Outer Space
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PhiliPamInCoventry
Holbrooks
Thread starter
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139 of 239
Sat 22nd Oct 2016 10:31am
Hi all
Not so much to see last night, but the shower peaks tonight & tomorrow. It's the tail-wake from Comet Haley. I am late getting up this morning in consequence. |
Non-Coventry -
Astronomy, The Sky and Outer Space
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PhiliPamInCoventry
Holbrooks
Thread starter
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140 of 239
Fri 28th Jul 2017 7:25pm
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Non-Coventry -
Astronomy, The Sky and Outer Space
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PhiliPamInCoventry
Holbrooks
Thread starter
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141 of 239
Tue 10th Jul 2018 9:41am
Morning all
We in Coventry have our own in house forum observatory, if our website manager will forgive my intrusion.
Metro.co.uk). |
Non-Coventry -
Astronomy, The Sky and Outer Space
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mcsporran
Coventry & Cebu
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144 of 239
Wed 8th Aug 2018 11:02pm
On 10th Jul 2018 5:37pm, Garlands Joke Shop said:
Great photo of Saturn - well done Rob et al., hard to believe that we can see something that is 746 million miles away from us.
Not only that, you're seeing it in the position it was at more than an hour ago, in that time it has moved 22,000 miles to the left assuming you are viewing it when it's closest to earth (or to the right if you're in the southern hemisphere).
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Non-Coventry -
Astronomy, The Sky and Outer Space
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PhiliPamInCoventry
Holbrooks
Thread starter
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145 of 239
Thu 15th Nov 2018 2:15pm
Hi all
Might be a clear night for the Leonids - not the latest chart topper, just a sky topper.
No special equipment needed, just some warm clobber. Find your darkest spot away from lighting. |
Non-Coventry -
Astronomy, The Sky and Outer Space
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Garlands Joke Shop
Coventry
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146 of 239
Mon 18th Feb 2019 9:54pm
Hi All,
The Moon is very bright and visible at the moment as it's a Supermoon tomorrow - definitely worth a look
Luke.
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Non-Coventry -
Astronomy, The Sky and Outer Space
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heathite
Coventry
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147 of 239
Tue 19th Feb 2019 7:52am
Not a lot to see.
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Non-Coventry -
Astronomy, The Sky and Outer Space
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scrutiny
coventry
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148 of 239
Wed 20th Feb 2019 9:39am
Has anyone seen one of these? |
Non-Coventry -
Astronomy, The Sky and Outer Space
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Midland Red
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149 of 239
Wed 20th Feb 2019 10:52am
I doubt if anyone has ever seen one! |
Non-Coventry -
Astronomy, The Sky and Outer Space
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Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex
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150 of 239
Fri 22nd Mar 2019 2:20pm
On Wednesday night I was unable to see the full Worm Moon because of cloud - so called by old gardeners as the sign of spring and the sighting of worms in the garden due to warmer air. There was an old saying, 17th century (when the gardening rage was for walks) - 'The white lilac walk in the moonlight, the golden laburnum walk in the sunlight'. |
Non-Coventry -
Astronomy, The Sky and Outer Space
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