Hi,
On 2-5-2011 18:22, Jones Beene wrote:
In addition to that, and possibly far more relevant to the experimenter -
you have the Sun's rotation- or should I say double rotation. The core of
the sun rotates at a different rate than its surface, and it works out to
every 33 days. The solar core is the source of solar neutrinos and is more
massive.
Quote from (http://news.stanford.edu/news/2010/august/sun-082310.html)
The explanation? The core of the sun -- where nuclear reactions
produce neutrinos -- apparently spins more slowly than the surface
we see.
"It may seem counter-intuitive, but it looks as if the core rotates
more slowly than the rest of the sun," Sturrock said."
I don't see what is counter-intuitive about this.
If you look at the principle of "Viscosity" , which is being said to
apply to gases and fluids, then why would this not apply to plasmas?
It seems that the core of the sun is apparently having more friction
(most likely due to a more condensed composition) than the surface of
the sun.
B.t.w. according http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biorhythm - Quote:
Most biorhythm models use three cycles: a 23-day "physical" cycle, a
28-day "emotional" cycle, and a 33-day "intellectual" cycle.
Although the 28-day cycle is the same length as the average woman's
menstrual cycle <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Menstrual_cycle> and
was originally described as a "female" cycle (see below), the two
are not necessarily in any particular synchronization. Each of these
cycles varies between high and low extremes sinusoidally, with days
where the cycle crosses the zero line described as "critical days"
of greater risk or uncertainty.
Calculation
The equations for the cycles are:
o physical: sin(2?/t/ / 23),
o emotional: sin(2?/t/ / 28),
o intellectual: sin(2?/t/ / 33),
o intuitive: sin(2?/t/ / 38),
where /t/ indicates the number of days since birth.
Kind regards,
MoB