Posted by Dave Hill on March 7, 2010, 4:28 pm
> Full moon varies by three weeks. Temperatures are more related to the sun than
> what the moon does.
Strange!
Everywhere I've lived we have had a full moon every Four weeks.
I will agree that the temp in the day is related to the sunshine and
where the wind is blowing from, but a full moon and a clear sky and
you can get a radiation frost even if the daytime temp has been 60f.
David Hill
Posted by Paul Luton on March 7, 2010, 5:43 pm
On 07/03/2010 21:28, Dave Hill wrote:
>> Full moon varies by three weeks. Temperatures are more related to the sun than
>> what the moon does.
> Strange!
> Everywhere I've lived we have had a full moon every Four weeks.
> I will agree that the temp in the day is related to the sunshine and
> where the wind is blowing from, but a full moon and a clear sky and
> you can get a radiation frost even if the daytime temp has been 60f.
The clear sky is the relevant point there. (The full moon just makes the
clearness of the sky more obvious)
Paul
--
CTC Right to Ride Rep. for Richmond upon Thames
Posted by Martin on March 7, 2010, 5:49 pm
wrote:
>On 07/03/2010 21:28, Dave Hill wrote:
>>
>>> Full moon varies by three weeks. Temperatures are more related to the sun
than
>>> what the moon does.
You snipped the period during which you said the full moon would occur.
>>
>> Strange!
>> Everywhere I've lived we have had a full moon every Four weeks.
>> I will agree that the temp in the day is related to the sunshine and
>> where the wind is blowing from, but a full moon and a clear sky and
>> you can get a radiation frost even if the daytime temp has been 60f.
You can get radiation frost with a new moon or any other phase of the moon.
>The clear sky is the relevant point there. (The full moon just makes the
>clearness of the sky more obvious)
>Paul
--
Martin
> what the moon does.