in this link:
http://www.isisinform.com/category/memorials/anthem-veterans-memorial/
Regards
Patrick
From: Frank King
Sent: Saturday, January 21, 2017 2:59 PM
To: Geoff Thurston
Cc: John Goodman ; Sundial List
Subject: Re: Unusual bi-annual sundial
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Dear Roger,
Thank you for your comments on the John Dee
implementation of the Omar Khayyam calendar.
> At one longitude, 77° W, the equinox
> would always be on the same day. Is this
> God's Longitude?
Yes. At that longitude the vernal equinox
would invariably fall on 21 March.
Sadly, this
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Dear Geoff,
As so often, you cause me to reflect a
little and to refine my analysis...
> I wonder if the errors might be masked
> by the 32 arc minute solar penumbra.
In pondering this "instrument" I made
the naive assumption
hngood...@mac.com>
Cc: "Sundial List" <sundial@uni-koeln.de>
Subject: Re: Unusual bi-annual sundial
> Dear John,
>
> I wondered when someone would spot that there is a
> whole can of worms waiting to be opened here...
>
>> Won't the factors that necessitate the a
On Jan 20, 2017, at 7:40 AM, Frank King wrote:
> If I had been consulted, I would have suggested that the Great Seal should be
> a little smaller so that it will always be wholly illuminated at the crucial
> instant!
That would have been a clever and elegant solution!
Dear John,
I am not sure the Chief Engineer fully
grasped what is going on though he has
indeed appreciated that, at the required
moment, both the altitude and the azimuth
of the sun change from one year to the
the next.
In a crucial sentence he asserts:
Each year, the center of the sun is
Thank you, Frank, for that comprehensive analysis of the problem. However,
I wonder if the errors might be masked by the 32 arc minute solar penumbra.
Best wishes,
Geoff
On 19 January 2017 at 16:33, Frank King wrote:
> Dear John,
>
> I wondered when someone would spot that
http://www.onlineatanthem.com/news/memorial-science
> <http://www.onlineatanthem.com/news/memorial-science>
>
> Patrick
>
>
> From: John Goodman
> Sent: Thursday, January 19, 2017 5:01 PM
> To: Frank King ; Sundial List
> Subject: Re: Unusual bi-annual sundial
>
To: Frank King ; Sundial List
Subject: Re: Unusual bi-annual sundial
Thank you, Frank. You’ve sharpened my vague suspicions with mathematical
clarity.
> On Jan 19, 2017, at 11:33 AM, Frank King <f...@cl.cam.ac.uk> wrote:
>
> OK, take a deep breath and see what we
Thank you, Frank. You’ve sharpened my vague suspicions with mathematical
clarity.
> On Jan 19, 2017, at 11:33 AM, Frank King wrote:
>
> OK, take a deep breath and see what we are up against...
---
Dear John,
I wondered when someone would spot that there is a
whole can of worms waiting to be opened here...
> Won't the factors that necessitate the addition
> of a leap day prevent this alignment from
> happening at exactly 11/11 11:11 every year?
Quite so. No doubt you looked at the
> To: "sundial@uni-koeln.de <mailto:sundial@uni-koeln.de>"
> <sundial@uni-koeln.de <mailto:sundial@uni-koeln.de>>
> Subject: Unusual bi-annual sundial
>
> I have been to Arizona many times but never saw this "working sundial" of
> sorts
Something else that happens twice a year is MIT Henge.
http://www.dickkoolish.com/rmk_page/mithenge.html
- Original Message -
From:
"Art Krenzel" <phoenix98...@msn.com>
To:
"sundial@uni-koeln.de" <sundial@uni-koeln.de>
Cc:
Sent:
Wed, 18 Jan 2017 22
I have been to Arizona many times but never saw this "working sundial" of
sorts. It is on my bucket list now.
I thought you might enjoy watching the beauty of math, the sun and time all
coming together. There is a 30 second video of the solar display near the
bottom of the opening page at
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