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Originally posted by PsykoOps
I dont know if there are any cameras that allow them to be used with a flash trigger. I know there is a special remote trigger that reacts to lightning for that purpose.
I'm waiting for good night time thunder so I can set my camera to take long exposures with continous shooting for as long as I have battery power and enough room on the card. I plan to set my camera on F32, aperture priority, Iso 100 and continous shooting and lock down the wire trigger and then just wait.
According to the China Meteorological Administration (CMA), 141 people died in lightning strikes in July.
China's top meteorological official blamed global warming for the extreme seasonal weather.
Originally posted by darkheartrising
i've tried to set up my camera with a slave drive flash and use the lightning as the driver instead of another flash...it should work but i haven't got it to work...looks good in theory doesn't it?
Originally posted by evilod
Originally posted by Now_Then
Hasn't China got the most active weather control program going - off the top of my head they've even got a government minister for weather modification.
You are right. In fact, they are guaranteeing sunny skies during the Olympics next year. Here are a few stats about their program.
According to Wang Guanghe, director of the Weather Modification Department under the Chinese Academy of Meteorological Sciences, each of China's more than 30 provinces and province-level municipalities today boast a weather-modification base, employing more than 32,000 people, 7,100 anti-aircraft guns, 4,991 special rocket launchers and 30-odd aircraft across the country.
www.atimes.com...
I would argue that sudden changes in any type of weather phenomenon simply cannot be attributed to global warming. Why would a gradual increase in CO2 in our atmosphere over the past century or so cause a sudden change, right now? Would it not have been gradually changing our climate over this time period?
So, if the number of deaths by lightning in China were, in fact, unusually high in last month, it is ridiculous to attribute it to global warming. Does it sound more logical to blame a sudden regional spike in the number of lightning deaths on a gradual increase of CO2 levels over the past century, or does it make more sense to question whether the government's Weather Modification Department may have a role in the increase of lightning?
Personally, I am not convinced that storms, overall, are any stronger or more frequent than usual. By usual, I mean in terms of what I have known throughout my life and, more importantly, what the Earth has seen throughout its own life. Geology indicates that the Earth has always had natural cycles that directly impact the climate. Who are we to think that we are just now causing the Earth to undergo changes unlike ever before?
With that being said, do I feel that the efforts to curb global warming are a good thing. Absolutely. Raping the Earth...
Sorry if this came off as a rant.
* Israel has a policy called "nuclear opacity" or "nuclear ambiguity," which consists of refusing to confirm or deny that it has nuclear weapons at all. In 1986, however, whistle-blower Mordechai Vanunu, an Israeli nuclear weapons worker, published pictures of nuclear weapons facilities in Israel. Today, experts agree that Israel has between 100 and 300 warheads (and Israel doesn't deny it).
** India and Pakistan both admit (boast?) that they have weapons, but are cagey about how many. Estimates for India run from 40 to 90 and for Pakistan from 30 to 50.
*** North Korea is anybody's guess. At the end of 2003, U.S. intelligence experts were surmising it had three bombs, but four months later they tentatively raised their estimate to eight. They also said North Korea is geared up to build about six bombs a year from here on out.
Originally posted by evilod
Nixie,
Whether you were referring to the US or China (as I'm not sure which country you meant), my answer is yes, without a doubt.
That sounded like a rhetorical question though, because I always thought it was fairly well established which countries had, or at least had the capability to produce, nuclear weapons. Of course, there's always the possibility that countries without the facilities to make nukes could acquire them from others that did. However, I would question how well that information could be kept secret. So, I guess I'm curious as to why you asked.
Originally posted by nixie_nox
My point is this: why is it so easy to believe that we have capabilities to launch the planet into a nuclear winter dropping the temperature between 10-20 degrees in a matter of minutes.
Yet, feel that 6 billion people, and a 150 years of industry/pollution/draining of resources, can't cause global warming.
Regional officials told Xinhua that most of this year's deaths have involved local farmers who were unaware of the storms' potential danger.
Those officials also cited a lack of available shelter throughout the region as a significant cause for the increased number of lightning-based deaths.
Science Daily
Originally posted by evilod
Truths can be manipulated to lie and mislead, and it seems it has become fashionable to charge global warming for all sorts of, what is being touted as, unusually harsh weather phenomena. For example, note that China only started keeping records for lightning strike deaths in 2000. So, it may be true to say that last month was the highest number of lightning deaths on record, but we're not dealing with a whole lot of data here. To say that global warming must be the reason is kind of jumping the gun, or possibly diverting attention away from what may be the real culprit.
Either way, it would still just be speculation in claiming that it was global warming's fault. In my opinion, the following seems to be a more realistic conclusion.
Regional officials told Xinhua that most of this year's deaths have involved local farmers who were unaware of the storms' potential danger.
Those officials also cited a lack of available shelter throughout the region as a significant cause for the increased number of lightning-based deaths.
Science Daily
I see. Your saying everyone shouldn't jump on the green colored band wagon and every phenomenon can't be linked with global warming.
And I agree with this. Just like so many other issues, if it gets played out too much, people will get de-sensitized and stop listening.
[edit on 6-8-2007 by nixie_nox]
How would we drop the temp in a matter of minutes?
We could raise temps very significantly in localised areas extremely quickly - lots of nukes have been set off already - I can see a crack in your argument, but it goes against my beliefs. Here goes any who:
6 billion people cause all that damage in 150 years, vs more than 2,072 tests (don't forget the 2 used in anger - god rest) and thats what we know about link
Should we just not thin out the population a wee bit by nuking them??
Nukeing stuff seems to be doing a bit less damage than all of those nasty 6 billion don't you think?