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#1
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Seen Fata Morgana at sea?
If so what did you see and why is it different than the usual? Good for 4 asa points What is a conjunction in the celestial navigation arena. And why are they useful? Good for 7 asa points Joe |
#2
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A mirage.
"Joe" wrote in message om... Seen Fata Morgana at sea? If so what did you see and why is it different than the usual? Good for 4 asa points What is a conjunction in the celestial navigation arena. And why are they useful? Good for 7 asa points Joe |
#3
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"Scott Vernon" wrote in message ...
A mirage. You get half points Scotty, You failed to fully answer the question of why it is different than the usual mirage. "Joe" wrote in message om... Seen Fata Morgana at sea? If so what did you see and why is it different than the usual? Good for 4 asa points What is a conjunction in the celestial navigation arena. And why are they useful? Good for 7 asa points Joe |
#4
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![]() "Joe" wrote in message om... "Scott Vernon" wrote in message ... A mirage. You get half points Scotty, You failed to fully answer the question of why it is different than the usual mirage. how many half points? Scotty |
#5
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"Scott Vernon" wrote in message ...
"Joe" wrote in message om... "Scott Vernon" wrote in message ... A mirage. You get half points Scotty, You failed to fully answer the question of why it is different than the usual mirage. how many half points? 7/8th of 3 half points Joe Scotty |
#6
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![]() "Joe" wrote how many points? 78 and 3 half points WhooooHooooooo!!! |
#7
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What they had seen were 'sundogs', created by microscopic ice crystals in
high wispy cirrus clouds, bending sunlight like glass prisms so that a pair of 'ghost' images of the sun appeared alongside the real sun. It's more common than you'd think - watch out for a veil of cirrus cloud over the sun on a bright day. Small wonder that these sorts of optical phenomena can easily be taken as religious signs. One memorable case was the tragic mountaineering expedition led by Edward Whymper on the first ascent of the Matterhorn in 1865. They mountaineers reached the peak but on their descent tragedy struck when four of the men fell down a precipice to their deaths. Later that evening Whymper saw an amazing vision: a circle of light with three crosses in the sky. "The ghostly apparitions of light hung motionless; it was a strange and awesome sight, unique to me and indescribably imposing at such a moment." Whymper had seen sunlight split by a veil of thin cloud into a large bow, part of a horizontal circle with vertical pillars of light crossing it. A similar sort of horizontal band can also be seen when you look at a light through a window smeared with grease in one direction or reflected by finely ribbed glass; the band of light is always seen at right angles to the ripples. Mountaineers also see ghosts! Huge shadowy spectres called Brocken Spectres, after the Brocken peak in Germany, are created by the shadows of mountaineers projected onto low clouds and reflected back by the tiny water droplets in the mist. Probably the commonest light show in the sky are mirages. They can bend light over the horizon so that people as far as Hastings have clearly seen the French coast across the English Channel, and sailors in Dublin Bay have claimed to see Mount Snowdon a 100 miles away. "Joe" wrote in message om... Seen Fata Morgana at sea? If so what did you see and why is it different than the usual? Good for 4 asa points What is a conjunction in the celestial navigation arena. And why are they useful? Good for 7 asa points Joe |
#8
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fabulous response Bob.
Bob Crantz wrote What they had seen were 'sundogs', created by microscopic ice crystals in high wispy cirrus clouds, bending sunlight like glass prisms so that a pair of 'ghost' images of the sun appeared alongside the real sun. It's more common than you'd think - watch out for a veil of cirrus cloud over the sun on a bright day. Small wonder that these sorts of optical phenomena can easily be taken as religious signs. One memorable case was the tragic mountaineering expedition led by Edward Whymper on the first ascent of the Matterhorn in 1865. They mountaineers reached the peak but on their descent tragedy struck when four of the men fell down a precipice to their deaths. Later that evening Whymper saw an amazing vision: a circle of light with three crosses in the sky. "The ghostly apparitions of light hung motionless; it was a strange and awesome sight, unique to me and indescribably imposing at such a moment." Whymper had seen sunlight split by a veil of thin cloud into a large bow, part of a horizontal circle with vertical pillars of light crossing it. A similar sort of horizontal band can also be seen when you look at a light through a window smeared with grease in one direction or reflected by finely ribbed glass; the band of light is always seen at right angles to the ripples. Mountaineers also see ghosts! Huge shadowy spectres called Brocken Spectres, after the Brocken peak in Germany, are created by the shadows of mountaineers projected onto low clouds and reflected back by the tiny water droplets in the mist. Probably the commonest light show in the sky are mirages. They can bend light over the horizon so that people as far as Hastings have clearly seen the French coast across the English Channel, and sailors in Dublin Bay have claimed to see Mount Snowdon a 100 miles away. "Joe" wrote Seen Fata Morgana at sea? If so what did you see and why is it different than the usual? Good for 4 asa points What is a conjunction in the celestial navigation arena. And why are they useful? Good for 7 asa points |
#9
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I thought it was a bit wordy.......but.
Scotty "Bart Senior" wrote in message et... fabulous response Bob. Bob Crantz wrote What they had seen were 'sundogs', created by microscopic ice crystals in high wispy cirrus clouds, bending sunlight like glass prisms so that a pair of 'ghost' images of the sun appeared alongside the real sun. It's more common than you'd think - watch out for a veil of cirrus cloud over the sun on a bright day. Small wonder that these sorts of optical phenomena can easily be taken as religious signs. One memorable case was the tragic mountaineering expedition led by Edward Whymper on the first ascent of the Matterhorn in 1865. They mountaineers reached the peak but on their descent tragedy struck when four of the men fell down a precipice to their deaths. Later that evening Whymper saw an amazing vision: a circle of light with three crosses in the sky. "The ghostly apparitions of light hung motionless; it was a strange and awesome sight, unique to me and indescribably imposing at such a moment." Whymper had seen sunlight split by a veil of thin cloud into a large bow, part of a horizontal circle with vertical pillars of light crossing it. A similar sort of horizontal band can also be seen when you look at a light through a window smeared with grease in one direction or reflected by finely ribbed glass; the band of light is always seen at right angles to the ripples. Mountaineers also see ghosts! Huge shadowy spectres called Brocken Spectres, after the Brocken peak in Germany, are created by the shadows of mountaineers projected onto low clouds and reflected back by the tiny water droplets in the mist. Probably the commonest light show in the sky are mirages. They can bend light over the horizon so that people as far as Hastings have clearly seen the French coast across the English Channel, and sailors in Dublin Bay have claimed to see Mount Snowdon a 100 miles away. "Joe" wrote Seen Fata Morgana at sea? If so what did you see and why is it different than the usual? Good for 4 asa points What is a conjunction in the celestial navigation arena. And why are they useful? Good for 7 asa points |
#10
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"Bob Crantz" wrote in message link.net...
the band of light is always seen at right angles to the ripples. Very close but like scotty you failed to mention why this type of mirage is unique from the average mirage. Its the reason things are seen 100's of miles away. Fata Morgana's are mirages that occur in a vertical form, never in the horizional. Can make a moter vessel look like a sailboat with a very tall mast at sea. Joe "Joe" wrote in message om... Seen Fata Morgana at sea? If so what did you see and why is it different than the usual? Good for 4 asa points What is a conjunction in the celestial navigation arena. And why are they useful? Good for 7 asa points Joe |
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