Thanks for the link. I would point others to read the whole page and
not just the part about the ringing atmosphere.  Their is other
information
that is pertinent to our situations since it has to do within a radius
starting at
only 5 miles above us.

 Interesting story about 6-9 day cycles emerging.  But if
anything I would suspect this is something that helps lead others from
the
truth that what we suffer is actually manmade.  They seem to always be
trying
to throw out some public disclosure that points others at the random
of nature
or natural and pointing us as far as they can from manmade.

   What I hear isn't anything random, or I would't be able to perceive
some form
of a relevant pattern that my brain is recognizing.  Nor would others,
on this
group, have the capacity to be recognizing the perception of the
patterns emerging
of the noise of the sound.


http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2008/12/081216-earth-breathes_2.html

Starting at about 5 miles (85 kilometers) above Earth's surface, the
thermosphere has been known to experience expansion and contraction
every 27 days, the time it takes the sun to rotate on its axis.

But until now few scientists had looked at shorter-term changes in
atmospheric density.

Thayer and colleagues found fluctuations in density roughly every
five, seven, or nine days that correspond to changes in geomagnetic
activity, atmospheric composition, and infrared radiation—all signs
that extreme solar weather is at work.

The team thinks coronal holes help explain the pattern of the breaths.


Ringing Atmosphere

David Klumpar, a solar physicist at Montana State University in
Bozeman, said that activity from the sun is constantly and randomly
"tapping" Earth, creating oscillations in the our planet's natural
frequencies like a spoon tapping on a glass of water.

"I would imagine that Thayer [and colleagues] are finding some of
those natural frequencies," said Klumpar, who was not involved in the
work.

"The atmosphere is ringing, like a water glass when 'tapped' by solar
eruptions."

David Hathaway, a solar physicist at NASA's Marshall Space Flight
Center, said that, without having seen the actual data, "I'm a little
surprised."

He noted that solar scientists have long known about the 27-day cycles
of geomagnetic activity related to the sun's rotation.

"But on a nine-day cycle, I'm not sure what it would be."

He added that the last two years would indeed have seen most of the
atmospheric disturbances coming from coronal holes.

The real question with the shorter-term bumps noticed by Thayer's team
would be how significant they are above the "noise"—expected and
random variations in atmospheric conditions.


On Dec 17, 3:57 pm, "lindaramey" <[email protected]>
wrote:
> SCROLL DOWN TO RINGING ATMOSPHERE     
> HUMM????http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2008/12/081216-earth-breathes...
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