Thursday, December 31, 2009

Jan 1 2010

Now the northern hemisphere is colder than Dec 20 image. So we have had an increase in temperature in the northern hemisphere, when it should have been getting colder. And it has cooled back down below what it was before the solstice.

So what is the explanation for the heat spike? The only heat source that I can think of is the galactic lensing that I proposed. This pattern matches the theory exactly.

North america has a magenta cell just above the Canadian border, that was not in not in Dec 20. The dark blue area has joined with the same color in Greenland. The dark purple has expanded when compared to Dec 20.

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

dec 31 2009

You can see, we are almost back to Dec 20, in the northern hemisphere, except that there is now a magenta area over newfoundland. Greenland is a little warmer at the tip, but the cold is intensifying in siberia, with northern europe almost all dark blue. The white are in australia is getting smaller. Antarctica is now getting a little warmer.

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Dec 30 2009

If you go and compare this image with Dec 20, the green area is starting to look like it does in the dec 30 image. There is less of the green in the Dec 30 image. The eastern seaboard is now the dark blue color and the blue area joins greenland and north america.

The hot zone in Australia is shrinking, but the orange area off Brazil is getting bigger. The theory says that the cooling trend will win out, so let's see in the next few days.

Monday, December 28, 2009

Dec 29, 2009

It is now possible to go back and look at the green band (40 degree F ) to the the temperature expansion from dec 20 to dec 24, and the drop off since then. The drop in temperature will continue, probably until jan 7 - jan 14th. Then the temp will rise slowly from there Then it will be possible to see how dramatic the shift was at the equinox.

Sunday, December 27, 2009

dec 29 2009


Hi
This is the map of Dec 29. Even though the blue are has expanded over Norway, the magenta area over north america has expanded dramatically to more than make up for the blue expansion. The south pole magenta area is now moving toward open ocean, expanding even though the trend is to heat up

Saturday, December 26, 2009

northern hemisphere is cooling faster

Now you can see the the very dar magenta at the far north is expanding rapidly. There are some areas where there is a local increase of temperature, like the blue cell over Tibet. But the green is completely below Iceland now.
I am watching the red circle centered on Sri Lanka, to see if it disappears as the earth cools. If id does, it may come back later. Australia is a slight bit warmer, but should start to cool off, as energy decrease accelerates.
I am starting to think of how big an effect this will have in 2012. The biggest long term effect is going to come a rise in sea level. That rise comes from ice that has been stored on land, suddenly gets added to the ocean. The ice can remain frozen for the most part - it only needs to move from the land to the sea. The iceberg could take another 3 years to melt, but the rise in water happens almost instantaneously.
If the temperature over Greenland hits a 100 F even for a week, there will be a huge increase in the total water melted. What most people do not realize is that glaciers advance by the amount of water flowing under them. The water acts as a lubricant.
So if a third of Greenland ice ends up in the ocean, we could see a foot rise in ocean within a few weeks. I wonder where the millions in Miami will move to?

Friday, December 25, 2009

Now colder than December 20th


If you look at the picture from Dec. 20, the day before the solstice, several observations can be made. The center of Australia and South Africa are warmer than Dec. 20th (the pink areas are present on the 26th) , while the total land area that is dark magenta colored is larger than the 20th. Northern Europe has turned a dark blue. The dark blue cell over Tibet has joined with the area over Siberia. The green area next to Iceland has shrunk.

This trend of cooling should accelerate over the next few days. Africa and Australia should cool also as the energy withdrawal continues at a faster rate than the normal heating trend for the southern hemisphere at this time of year.

To give you some idea of how much energy is going to be withdrawn from the world weather system, I will compare it to a 10 Megaton nuclear bomb. The energy withdrawn from the weather system will probably be on the order of 1000 - 5000 of those bombs!

Thursday, December 24, 2009

sine wave decline of energy starting

Now you can see the slight decline in energy. Look at the energy that was in Australian outback 2 days ago. The 23rd latitude gets the most energy at this time of year, so will show the greatest decrease from now on. The only countervailing increase will come from daily incremental energy increase in the southern hemisphere. This should not affect the decrease that much. The total energy decrease will come from the far north, where the purple and magenta areas will increase the fastest. The light blue areas are the ones to shrink the most.
It should be possible to calculate the total energy that was put into the earth's system. It even should be possible to predict the total energy input in 2012. Thus, it would be possible to predict the magnitude of the problem facing us
The decline will start slowly, then in a week or so, reach the maximum drop in energy. This could create more severe weather patterns than the warming did, at least in the northern hemisphere.

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

temp peak dec 24 2009


Hi This picture may show the most warming, as we are past the winter solstice and are moving away from the galactic lensing. In the next couple of days to a week, we should start to see the warmer areas in Northern hemisphere shrink and move back toward the equator. The southern hemisphere hot spots should also shrink, which is contrary to the overall trend of the southern hemisphere getting warmer in winter.

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Monday, December 21, 2009

dec 21 2009

Hi folks
Here is the photo of the earths temp on December 21. What is important about this photo is that in the southern part of Africa there is a 10 degree bump in temperature over the last 2 days. Watch this area to see if it increases over the next few days. The temperature should be going down, not up.