Comet Elenin

Discussion in 'Events' started by Phil A, Aug 29, 2011.

  1. Phil A

    Phil A Guest

    Ratings:
    +0
  2. *dim*

    *dim* Head Gardener

    Joined:
    Jun 26, 2011
    Messages:
    3,548
    Location:
    Cambridge
    Ratings:
    +1,593
  3. Phil A

    Phil A Guest

    Ratings:
    +0
    Cool, twin outgassing:dbgrtmb:

    Seem to remember that on Halley Bop
     
    • Like Like x 1
    • *dim*

      *dim* Head Gardener

      Joined:
      Jun 26, 2011
      Messages:
      3,548
      Location:
      Cambridge
      Ratings:
      +1,593
      quote from another forum:

      snip:

      The Earth, Sun, and Elenin line up in a row twice every year. The last four have all coincided with large quakes: :

      Sept 1, 2009 (Sept 2 quake in Indonesia, 7.0)
      Feb 25, 2010 (Feb 26 quake in Japan, 7.0; Feb 27 quake in Chile, 8.8)
      Sept 3, 2010 (Sept 3 quake in New Zealand 7.0)
      Mar 14, 2011 (March 11 quake in Japan: 9.0)
      Sept 27, 2011 ??

      Our astronomers say that science has proven that Elenin is neither large nor massive enough to exert any significant gravitational force upon the Earth. They say that they observed it pass close by an asteroid and it didn’t perturb the asteroid’s orbit at all, so if it can’t budge a teeny asteroid at close range, then how is it going to move the Earth from an even greater distance away? It’s a good argument, based in solid science.

      But Elenin’s lineups have coincided with large quakes on each of its last four alignments, within three days of those alignments, and this is a statistically significant connection. Each of those quakes was 7.0 or better, and 7.0+ quakes only occur on an average of 16 per year.

      The statistical probability of four 7.0+ quakes occurring in these four predetermined 3-day windows is 0.0299%, or roughly three chances in ten thousand, or one chance in 3300.

      If a person tried to do this, picking four 3-day periods out of thin air, trying to guess when a 7.0 quake would happen, he'd only guess right once in 3300 tries.

      Two of the five quakes that occurred during those lineups were much larger than 7.0 quakes; one was 8.8 and one was 9.0, so that makes the probability of this all being a mere coincidence that much more unlikely.

      So don't tell me that Elenin is not going to be a problem. I won't believe you until you can explain what caused this statistically significant connection between 7.0+ quakes and Elenin's last four alignments.
       
    • Phil A

      Phil A Guest

      Ratings:
      +0
      The concern seems to be not about Elenin but a large body that entered the solar system at roughly the same time. One bloke was telling everyone to get 150 miles from the coast, impossible in the uk.

      Another was using a NASA observatory & found what looks like a planet where the comet should be. No outgassing.:what:
       
    • *dim*

      *dim* Head Gardener

      Joined:
      Jun 26, 2011
      Messages:
      3,548
      Location:
      Cambridge
      Ratings:
      +1,593
      sounds like planet X or the other name of Niburu ... or the other name of 'wormwood' .... lots of speculation at the moment

      well, if it's the so called 2nd sun, my garden could do with a bit of extra warmth

      now, some say in the past few days, comet elenin has split in two, but some say that is disinfo from Nasa ... read this thread:

      Kerry Cassidy Blog

      whatever it is, will /should be visible within the next few weeks

      :dunno:
       
    • Phil A

      Phil A Guest

      Ratings:
      +0
    • Phil A

      Phil A Guest

      Ratings:
      +0
      After trawling thru all the conspiracy sites (even the news channels in usa are getting in on it)

      You'd get led to believe that its going to hit us, and that the usa and russia are building underground shelters, nasa has sent the families of workers a video telling them to gather food & water etc.

      Finally found this,

      Comet Elenin Self-Destructs - Observing Highlights - SkyandTelescope.com

      Looks like a damp squib after all.
       
    Loading...

    Share This Page

    1. This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
      By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.
      Dismiss Notice