Difference between revisions of "A Potential Electromagnetic Source for the Observed Wang Eclipse Anomaly"

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==Abstract==
 
==Abstract==
  
Researchers have been straining to find explanations for the anomalies recorded by Wang, et al, during the 1997 Mohe eclipse, based on the assumption that the anomalies were of gravitational origin. An examination of the energetic nature of the solar chromosphere-corona regions, the shielding geometry of the eclipse and the instrumentation design suggests that electromagnetic, rather than gravitational, effects may have produced the recorded data anomalies.[[Category:Scientific Paper]]
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Researchers have been straining to find explanations for the anomalies recorded by Wang, et al, during the 1997 Mohe eclipse, based on the assumption that the anomalies were of gravitational origin. An examination of the energetic nature of the solar chromosphere-corona regions, the shielding geometry of the eclipse and the instrumentation design suggests that electromagnetic, rather than gravitational, effects may have produced the recorded data anomalies.
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[[Category:Scientific Paper|potential electromagnetic source observed wang eclipse anomaly]]
  
 
[[Category:Gravity]]
 
[[Category:Gravity]]

Revision as of 10:01, 1 January 2017

Scientific Paper
Title A Potential Electromagnetic Source for the Observed Wang Eclipse Anomaly
Read in full Link to paper
Author(s) Barry Springer
Keywords Wang eclipse, electromagnetic susceptibility, gravity anomaly
Published 2012
Journal None
No. of pages 3

Read the full paper here

Abstract

Researchers have been straining to find explanations for the anomalies recorded by Wang, et al, during the 1997 Mohe eclipse, based on the assumption that the anomalies were of gravitational origin. An examination of the energetic nature of the solar chromosphere-corona regions, the shielding geometry of the eclipse and the instrumentation design suggests that electromagnetic, rather than gravitational, effects may have produced the recorded data anomalies.