Sun and Moon versus Temperature
Posted: Thu Dec 08, 2022 10:41 am
The CORONA VIRUS is the gift that just keeps giving. When you realise how many people are utterly morally corrupt in high places in all institutions across the world... It didn't just happen in 2020. We just got to see how utterly complete the web of lies is. This post has nothing to with that, but it's always worth pointing it out.
So, Liverpool, UK, it's about 3:30 PM on the 8th December and the temperature is 3ºC. That's as high as the temperature has got today so far in the shade. I have noticed for the last couple of nights the moon is close to full and rising from a north eastern direction. If you are not sure about moon movements, it is similar to the sun, but its inner/outer path has a month cycle. So tonight it will rise from a similar position, but either a little more north east or probably less as it comes back. It has been high in the sky the last few days, equivalent to a summer sun, so is relatively close.
If you look at the tables above, the weather in Liverpool for the last month, you will see, we are only interested in the last third of each chart, from the 1st December, the LOW temperature, bottom range line on first chart, starts dropping. The 29th of November was Half Moon, so we see from the 1st, the moon is getting fuller as it is increasingly moving back to a 180º position from the winter sun. As well as the temperature dropping, you can see on the second chart there is little cloud cover from the 29th, and none from around the 2nd, basically meaning clear nights. And I can confirm the last couple of nights have been clear sky. Also the third chart shows wind, and since the 29th there has been little to no wind.
Because there has been no wind and no rain for the last week, the LOW hasn't moved and the winter sun isn't strong enough to warm the ground, particularly the north sides of buildings, etc. So the temperature has continued to drop with each pass of the moon in its high summer position in the sky, and with each pass it becomes fuller, so therefore colder.
The point of this post. I guess you can try to do the scientific method and get a thermometer out in the full moon light and take the temperature first in the moon light, then in the shade. Else you can just observe the measurements and where the moon is in the sky. If it is high in a summer position, full, and there is no cloud cover, and the sun is in its winter position, I can guarantee you, it is going to be too cold for you to faff around in moon light with thermometers, particularly if it is something like day three of no wind, no cloud cover, no rain, were the LOW hasn't shifted and the night low temperatures are compounded because of the weak far sun.
I think the "no rain" is also an important factor when it comes to the ground staying cold. I'll discuss that in my next post.
So, Liverpool, UK, it's about 3:30 PM on the 8th December and the temperature is 3ºC. That's as high as the temperature has got today so far in the shade. I have noticed for the last couple of nights the moon is close to full and rising from a north eastern direction. If you are not sure about moon movements, it is similar to the sun, but its inner/outer path has a month cycle. So tonight it will rise from a similar position, but either a little more north east or probably less as it comes back. It has been high in the sky the last few days, equivalent to a summer sun, so is relatively close.
If you look at the tables above, the weather in Liverpool for the last month, you will see, we are only interested in the last third of each chart, from the 1st December, the LOW temperature, bottom range line on first chart, starts dropping. The 29th of November was Half Moon, so we see from the 1st, the moon is getting fuller as it is increasingly moving back to a 180º position from the winter sun. As well as the temperature dropping, you can see on the second chart there is little cloud cover from the 29th, and none from around the 2nd, basically meaning clear nights. And I can confirm the last couple of nights have been clear sky. Also the third chart shows wind, and since the 29th there has been little to no wind.
Because there has been no wind and no rain for the last week, the LOW hasn't moved and the winter sun isn't strong enough to warm the ground, particularly the north sides of buildings, etc. So the temperature has continued to drop with each pass of the moon in its high summer position in the sky, and with each pass it becomes fuller, so therefore colder.
The point of this post. I guess you can try to do the scientific method and get a thermometer out in the full moon light and take the temperature first in the moon light, then in the shade. Else you can just observe the measurements and where the moon is in the sky. If it is high in a summer position, full, and there is no cloud cover, and the sun is in its winter position, I can guarantee you, it is going to be too cold for you to faff around in moon light with thermometers, particularly if it is something like day three of no wind, no cloud cover, no rain, were the LOW hasn't shifted and the night low temperatures are compounded because of the weak far sun.
I think the "no rain" is also an important factor when it comes to the ground staying cold. I'll discuss that in my next post.