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Stationary model of the solar system

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Offline The Spoon

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Re: Why are earthquakes more likely to occur at night than during the day?
« Reply #20 on: 04/04/2020 16:34:42 »
It is almost as if the OP does not understand anything about science and posts nonsense all of the time.....
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Re: Why are earthquakes more likely to occur at night than during the day?
« Reply #21 on: 04/04/2020 16:37:43 »
Quote from: The Spoon on 04/04/2020 16:34:42
It is almost as if the OP does not understand anything about science and posts nonsense all of the time.....
Sadly, because the forum has a policy of not banning trolls, that happens a lot.
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Offline Yusup Hizirov (OP)

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Re: Why are earthquakes more likely to occur at night than during the day?
« Reply #22 on: 04/04/2020 16:51:14 »
There is little information in your links.
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Re: Why are earthquakes more likely to occur at night than during the day?
« Reply #23 on: 04/04/2020 17:11:15 »
Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 04/04/2020 16:52:50
What force is involved in the formation of the lenticular shape of the galaxy.
If I tell you that the evidence says it's a combination of gravity and the conservation of angular momentum, will you listen, or will you say it's magic pixie dust?

Because, let's face it, you don't have a track record of accepting evidence, do you?
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Offline Kryptid

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Re: Why are earthquakes more likely to occur at night than during the day?
« Reply #24 on: 04/04/2020 17:22:37 »
Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 04/04/2020 10:12:34
What force prevents the stars from spinning around the galactic core in one plane.

There isn't one. It's just more probable that a given star will orbit the core close to a plane. But there are outliers. Just like there is with our on Solar System. Most objects in the Solar System orbit close to a plane, but some orbit at almost a 90 degree angle to that plane.
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Offline Yusup Hizirov (OP)

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Re: Why are earthquakes more likely to occur at night than during the day?
« Reply #25 on: 04/04/2020 18:33:08 »
Quote from: Bored chemist on 04/04/2020 17:11:15
Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 04/04/2020 16:52:50
What force is involved in the formation of the lenticular shape of the galaxy.
If I tell you that the evidence says it's a combination of gravity and the conservation of angular momentum, will you listen, or will you say it's magic pixie dust?

Because, let's face it, you don't have a track record of accepting evidence, do you?
You can give a link to this information.
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Offline Yusup Hizirov (OP)

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Re: Why are earthquakes more likely to occur at night than during the day?
« Reply #26 on: 05/04/2020 12:42:24 »
Quote from: Kryptid on 04/04/2020 17:22:37
Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 04/04/2020 10:12:34
What force prevents the stars from spinning around the galactic core in one plane.

There isn't one. It's just more probable that a given star will orbit the core close to a plane. But there are outliers. Just like there is with our on Solar System. Most objects in the Solar System orbit close to a plane, but some orbit at almost a 90 degree angle to that plane.
The planets have an inclination of the orbit, but they rotate in the same plane.
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Science is a river of ideas, and false ideas are rocks in the riverbed.
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Online Bored chemist

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Re: Why are earthquakes more likely to occur at night than during the day?
« Reply #27 on: 05/04/2020 13:11:16 »
Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 04/04/2020 18:33:08
Quote from: Bored chemist on 04/04/2020 17:11:15
Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 04/04/2020 16:52:50
What force is involved in the formation of the lenticular shape of the galaxy.
If I tell you that the evidence says it's a combination of gravity and the conservation of angular momentum, will you listen, or will you say it's magic pixie dust?

Because, let's face it, you don't have a track record of accepting evidence, do you?
You can give a link to this information.
Yes.
Hre you are ignoring actual evidence, and pretending that one person's opinion is more important.
https://www.thenakedscientists.com/forum/index.php?topic=78750.msg598488#msg598488
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Offline puppypower

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Re: Why are earthquakes more likely to occur at night than during the day?
« Reply #28 on: 05/04/2020 14:11:57 »
Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 25/02/2020 02:25:51
Seismologists explained why earthquakes more often occur at night. https://www.google.com/amp/s/news.mail.ru/amp/incident/35211141/

His findings were published in New Concepts in the Global Tectonics Bulletin and in the Journal of the Geophysical Union of India.
At the same time, says Kolvankar, the number of earthquakes and their intensity decreases during the day and is the lowest day (15-16 hours), and then increases until midnight.
“This typical daily painting of seismicity seems to be constant throughout the world, regardless of period, season, longitude and depth,” said Kolvankar.
BARC seismologists based their research on data collected over 36 years - between 1973 and 2008 - analyzing different monthly stages and identifying repeating phases.

One wild card variable is water. I am the water man. As you increase the temperature and pressure, water changes phases. Water deep in the earth's crust is above its critical point; super critical water. This phase of water, where water become a dense fluid that is neither gas or liquid, but both, can easily dissolve minerals, such silica and quartz. Many gem stones form by various minerals crystalizing out of cooling hydrothermal water.

Other water studies have shown that water exists under the crust within the upper mantle and even deeper.

https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn25723-massive-ocean-discovered-towards-earths-core/

Based on experiments at the Lawrence Livermore Lab, water at the conditions of the assumed upper mantle pressures and temperatures is a phase known as super ionic water. This is nasty stuff. A slight pressure drop, will change superionic water back into super critical water, with the change exploding like TNT. If the earths plates need a push for movement, this phase of water is the most likely source. The phase change boundary will reduce/increase viscoelastic friction between the crust and the molten mantle materials based on tweaks in phase.

Although beyonds the need of this topic, water at even higher pressures and temperatures form even more exotic phases. Based on the pressure and temperature conditions established for the layers of the inner earth; outer and inner mantle, inner and outer core, each layer appears to reflect a water phase boundary. Water at the conditions of the core become a metal in the lab.

In terms of more nightly earthquakes, water is continuous from the atmosphere, to the oceans and crust, (sub-critical and critical water), to the mantle (superionic) to the lower mantle and outer core (ionic water) to the core (metallic water).

The sun during the day evaporates surface water. There moves positive charge upward into the atmosphere via the exposed hydrogen of water. If theoretically, all the water of the earth was integrated, from core to atmosphere, we would expect an induced election flow upward toward the surface because of solar evaporation. My guess is the iron core is rusting and releasing elections. This induced solar electron flow to the surface should make the oceans slightly alkaline; slightly negative relative the water. This is observed. Lighting make use of crust base electrons for the counter strike.

My chemical mechanism guess is the solar induced electron flow, upward through the earth's continuity of water, takes time to develop each day. The main impact on the super ionic and hydrothermal layers of water, at the phase boundary between the upper mantle and crust will occur later in the day.

Hydrothermal water is essentially separated H2O molecules, very close together but which  do not form hydrogen bonds. Instead that potential energy used to  bond with other things which give it powerful solvent power.

Super ionic water, as the term implies ionizes water molecules of super critical water,  into hydrogen proton and oxygen based ions. If we added extra elections to the super ionic water, this will impact the hydrogen proton side of the superionic phase. I can see a transitional phase back to hydrothermal with a boom! Now we have grease.
« Last Edit: 05/04/2020 14:20:59 by puppypower »
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Offline The Spoon

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Re: Why are earthquakes more likely to occur at night than during the day?
« Reply #29 on: 05/04/2020 15:27:18 »
Quote from: puppypower on 05/04/2020 14:11:57
I am the water man.
Dennis?
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Re: Why are earthquakes more likely to occur at night than during the day?
« Reply #30 on: 05/04/2020 19:03:54 »
Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 05/04/2020 12:42:24
The planets have an inclination of the orbit, but they rotate in the same plane.

Tell that to Uranus.
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Offline The Spoon

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Re: Why are earthquakes more likely to occur at night than during the day?
« Reply #31 on: 05/04/2020 19:08:50 »
Quote from: Kryptid on 05/04/2020 19:03:54
Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 05/04/2020 12:42:24
The planets have an inclination of the orbit, but they rotate in the same plane.

Tell that to Uranus.
Well, he is talking out of it!
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Re: Why are earthquakes more likely to occur at night than during the day?
« Reply #32 on: 07/04/2020 21:05:44 »
Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 07/04/2020 20:12:27
Seismologists explained why earthquakes more often occur at night. https://www.google.com/amp/s/news.mail.ru/amp/incident/35211141/

His findings were published in New Concepts in the Global Tectonics Bulletin and in the Journal of the Geophysical Union of India.
At the same time, says Kolvankar, the number of earthquakes and their intensity decreases during the day and is the lowest day (15-16 hours), and then increases until midnight.
“This typical daily painting of seismicity seems to be constant throughout the world, regardless of period, season, longitude and depth,” said Kolvankar.
BARC seismologists based their research on data collected over 36 years - between 1973 and 2008 - analyzing different monthly stages and identifying repeating phases.
OK,
Explain the actual data I posted.
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Online Bored chemist

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Re: Why are earthquakes more likely to occur at night than during the day?
« Reply #33 on: 08/04/2020 10:12:02 »
Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 08/04/2020 08:15:03
Quote from: Bored chemist on 07/04/2020 21:05:44
Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 07/04/2020 20:12:27
Seismologists explained why earthquakes more often occur at night. https://www.google.com/amp/s/news.mail.ru/amp/incident/35211141/

His findings were published in New Concepts in the Global Tectonics Bulletin and in the Journal of the Geophysical Union of India.
At the same time, says Kolvankar, the number of earthquakes and their intensity decreases during the day and is the lowest day (15-16 hours), and then increases until midnight.
“This typical daily painting of seismicity seems to be constant throughout the world, regardless of period, season, longitude and depth,” said Kolvankar.
BARC seismologists based their research on data collected over 36 years - between 1973 and 2008 - analyzing different monthly stages and identifying repeating phases.
OK,
Explain the actual data I posted.
Give a link to an official source, or to a scientific work.
If you think there's a problem with the data then you can check back through the wiki pages.
But these were big quakes, the newspapers will have reported many of them (all teh recent ones).
So it's a red herring to say the work isn't scientific.

Stop stalling and answer the question.
Why don't the data for the big earthquakes fit with your suggestion?
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Offline The Spoon

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Re: Why are earthquakes more likely to occur at night than during the day?
« Reply #34 on: 09/04/2020 09:00:09 »
Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 09/04/2020 08:54:28
Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 23/02/2020 11:49:26
Earthquake hypothesis.
When an earthquake forms in the sea, a circle diverges from the epicenter, due to which tsunamis occur. This suggests that in the epicenter of the earthquake, there is a rise and lowering of the earth's crust. During strong earthquakes, cracks up to 1 m wide are formed.
The solar Coriolis effect is one of the triggers of earthquakes.
https://studfile.net/preview/5787600/
And the horizontal movement of lithospheric plates, I believe, is more likely to create an oval rather than a circle, with subtle tsunamis. https://images.app.goo.gl/Qhxbg6viwKTpWBFj9
The reason for raising and lowering the earth's crust may be the following.
1. Magma releases gases, due to which the pressure in the earth rises and the earth's crust gives a crack, from the inside. Further, the lava flow rushes into the crack and quickly stops, due to which the first push occurs. Then from the epicenter, the second wave diverges.
90 percent of volcanoes are located in earthquake zones.
2. Explosion of underground gases in contact with hot lava.
3. Daily fluctuation of centrifugal force, which, on the midnight side of the earth is higher than on the midday side.
4. Waves are killers that can occur in the mantle.
5. Collision of seismic waves in the mantle of the earth. Reflected by two small earthquakes.
What utter nonsense - again. I can see that plate tectonics is something you are utterly ignorant about.

Also - why  the obsession with 'killer waves'?
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Online Bored chemist

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Re: Why are earthquakes more likely to occur at night than during the day?
« Reply #35 on: 10/04/2020 13:15:47 »
Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 09/04/2020 08:51:57
Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 08/04/2020 08:15:03
Quote from: Bored chemist on 07/04/2020 21:05:44
Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 07/04/2020 20:12:27
Seismologists explained why earthquakes more often occur at night. https://www.google.com/amp/s/news.mail.ru/amp/incident/35211141/

His findings were published in New Concepts in the Global Tectonics Bulletin and in the Journal of the Geophysical Union of India.
At the same time, says Kolvankar, the number of earthquakes and their intensity decreases during the day and is the lowest day (15-16 hours), and then increases until midnight.
“This typical daily painting of seismicity seems to be constant throughout the world, regardless of period, season, longitude and depth,” said Kolvankar.
BARC seismologists based their research on data collected over 36 years - between 1973 and 2008 - analyzing different monthly stages and identifying repeating phases.
OK,
Explain the actual data I posted.
Give a link to an official source, or to a scientific work.
You already posted this.
I responded.
Fundamentally, you need to  answer my question.
Explain the actual data I posted.
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Offline Yusup Hizirov (OP)

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Re: Why are earthquakes more likely to occur at night than during the day?
« Reply #36 on: 10/04/2020 19:44:44 »
Quote from: Bored chemist on 10/04/2020 13:15:47
Explain the actual data I posted.
Record your notes to the end.
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Life is a journey of light through the solar system with a short stop on Earth.
 



Online Bored chemist

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Re: Why are earthquakes more likely to occur at night than during the day?
« Reply #37 on: 10/04/2020 19:50:45 »
Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 10/04/2020 19:44:44
Record your notes to the end.
Rather than posting things that don't make sense,
Quote from: Bored chemist on 10/04/2020 13:15:47
Explain the actual data I posted.
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Offline Yusup Hizirov (OP)

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Re: Why are earthquakes more likely to occur at night than during the day?
« Reply #38 on: 11/04/2020 12:45:35 »
Quote from: Bored chemist on 10/04/2020 19:50:45
Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 10/04/2020 19:44:44
Record your notes to the end.
Rather than posting things that don't make sense,
Quote from: Bored chemist on 10/04/2020 13:15:47
Explain the actual data I posted.
Coriolis solar power also stretches the Earth along the Earth’s orbit.
Because of the daily rotation of the Earth, that side of the Earth that is at dawn approaches the Sun at a speed of 1600 km / h, and that side of the Earth that is at sunset, moves away from the Sun at a speed of 1600 km / h. Due to this, the Coriolis Solar Power stretches the Earth along the Earth’s orbit by several meters.
For this reason, earthquakes more often occur in the morning or in the evening. A hump also forms on the midnight side of the Earth, thanks to an increase in centrifugal force.
On the noon side of the Earth, a hump does not form, and at noon earthquakes occur less frequently and are weaker.
The existence of the Coriolis humps can be easily checked if, through a fixed telescope, one observes the geostationary satellite of the Earth during the day. https://bigenc.ru/physics/text/3199621
The video shows how the Coriolis Solar Power stretches the Earth and the Moon’s orbit along the Earth’s orbit.
Seismologists have found that earthquakes more often occur at night than during the day.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/news.mail.ru/amp/incident/35211141/
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Online Bored chemist

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Re: Why are earthquakes more likely to occur at night than during the day?
« Reply #39 on: 11/04/2020 12:53:25 »
Quote from: Bored chemist on 10/04/2020 13:15:47
Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 09/04/2020 08:51:57
Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 08/04/2020 08:15:03
Quote from: Bored chemist on 07/04/2020 21:05:44
Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 07/04/2020 20:12:27
Seismologists explained why earthquakes more often occur at night. https://www.google.com/amp/s/news.mail.ru/amp/incident/35211141/

His findings were published in New Concepts in the Global Tectonics Bulletin and in the Journal of the Geophysical Union of India.
At the same time, says Kolvankar, the number of earthquakes and their intensity decreases during the day and is the lowest day (15-16 hours), and then increases until midnight.
“This typical daily painting of seismicity seems to be constant throughout the world, regardless of period, season, longitude and depth,” said Kolvankar.
BARC seismologists based their research on data collected over 36 years - between 1973 and 2008 - analyzing different monthly stages and identifying repeating phases.
OK,
Explain the actual data I posted.
Give a link to an official source, or to a scientific work.
You already posted this.
I responded.
Fundamentally, you need to  answer my question.
Explain the actual data I posted.
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Tags: coriolis  / effect  / hypothesis  / cause  / earthquakes  / the explosion  / gases  / pseudoscience 
 
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