Weather Banter

Weather Banter (https://www.weather-banter.co.uk/)
-   uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) (https://www.weather-banter.co.uk/uk-sci-weather-uk-weather/)
-   -   [WR] Temperature during eclipse in Kent (https://www.weather-banter.co.uk/uk-sci-weather-uk-weather/99996-%5Bwr%5D-temperature-during-eclipse-kent.html)

Jonathan Stott October 3rd 05 02:50 PM

[WR] Temperature during eclipse in Kent
 
A comment in another post inspired me to look at the temperature graph
for this morning during the eclipse. I quick look indicates that the
temperature continued increasing (it was morning after all and last
night was cold) but the rate of increased temporarily slowed at 10:00am,
matching the time of maximum magnitude of the eclipse (when the
temperature was 10.7C).

A chart from midnight today is he

http://www.canterburyweather.co.uk/d...h=10&year=2005

Jonathan
Canterbury

Graham Easterling October 3rd 05 03:53 PM

[WR] Temperature during eclipse in Kent
 

"Jonathan Stott" wrote in message
...
A comment in another post inspired me to look at the temperature graph for
this morning during the eclipse. I quick look indicates that the
temperature continued increasing (it was morning after all and last night
was cold) but the rate of increased temporarily slowed at 10:00am, matching
the time of maximum magnitude of the eclipse (when the temperature was
10.7C).

A chart from midnight today is he

http://www.canterburyweather.co.uk/d...h=10&year=2005

Jonathan
Canterbury


During the August 1999 total eclipse in Cornwall (totality around 11:11 BST)
the temperature dropped around 2 degrees in Penzance, but started recovering
so after the eclipse became partial. That was with quite thick cloud. During
totality it actually felt much colder than it was.

We did get a quick glimpse of today's partial eclipse. I got a good photo of
the October 1996 partial eclipse, which was very similar to today's. It's on
my web-site at www.easterling.freeserve.co.uk/wpage8.html

Graham

Penzance Weather www.easterling.freeserve.co.uk/weather.html
Holiday Cottage www.easterling.freeserve.co.uk



Dave Liquorice October 3rd 05 04:19 PM

[WR] Temperature during eclipse in Kent
 
On Mon, 03 Oct 2005 15:50:59 +0100, Jonathan Stott wrote:

A comment in another post inspired me to look at the temperature
graph for this morning during the eclipse.


This comment makes me look at mine as well and there is a similar
slowing of the temp rise around 1000. TBH I wouldn't like to say it
was a direct result of the eclipse but that may have contributed.

http://www.howhill.com/weather/day.php (until 0100 Tuesday...)

Not as marked at the 11th August 1999 though:

http://www.howhill.com/weather/view....1999&m=08&d=11

Mind you that day was bright and sunny, this morning was over cast
with the cloud base only a few hundred feet above us.

--
Cheers
Dave. pam is missing e-mail




Tudor Hughes October 3rd 05 05:55 PM

Temperature during eclipse in Kent
 

Dave Liquorice wrote:
On Mon, 03 Oct 2005 15:50:59 +0100, Jonathan Stott wrote:

A comment in another post inspired me to look at the temperature
graph for this morning during the eclipse.


This comment makes me look at mine as well and there is a similar
slowing of the temp rise around 1000. TBH I wouldn't like to say it
was a direct result of the eclipse but that may have contributed.

http://www.howhill.com/weather/day.php (until 0100 Tuesday...)

Not as marked at the 11th August 1999 though:

http://www.howhill.com/weather/view....1999&m=08&d=11

Mind you that day was bright and sunny, this morning was over cast
with the cloud base only a few hundred feet above us.

--
Cheers
Dave. pam is missing e-mail



My record also shows a slowing of the temperature rise centred on
the time of maximum eclipse. The sky here was clear throughout.

Tudor Hughes, Warlingham, Surrey, 556 ft.


Adrian D. Shaw October 3rd 05 07:05 PM

[WR] Temperature during eclipse in Kent
 
Felly sgrifennodd Jonathan Stott :
A comment in another post inspired me to look at the temperature graph
for this morning during the eclipse. I quick look indicates that the
temperature continued increasing (it was morning after all and last
night was cold) but the rate of increased temporarily slowed at 10:00am,
matching the time of maximum magnitude of the eclipse (when the
temperature was 10.7C).


Yes you're right. Our temperature completely leveled out around that time.
Graphs at http://users.aber.ac.uk/ais/weather/current.html (scroll down).
Coincidence?

Adrian

--
Adrian Shaw ais@
Adran Cyfrifiadureg, Prifysgol Cymru, aber.
Aberystwyth, Ceredigion, Cymru ac.
http://users.aber.ac.uk/ais uk

Dave Liquorice October 3rd 05 08:43 PM

[WR] Temperature during eclipse in Kent
 
On 3 Oct 2005 20:05:45 +0100, Adrian D. Shaw wrote:

Yes you're right. Our temperature completely leveled out around that
time.

snip
Coincidence?


With so many stations reporting very similar slowing or leveling in
temperature change I don't think so. Looking at Mr Stott's pictures
roughly 50% of the sun was obscured. That's a 50% reduction in the
energy arriving, must make a difference.

--
Cheers
Dave. pam is missing e-mail




Mark Annand October 3rd 05 09:16 PM

[WR] Temperature during eclipse in Kent
 
Graham Easterling wrote:
"Jonathan Stott" wrote in message
...

A comment in another post inspired me to look at the temperature graph for
this morning during the eclipse. I quick look indicates that the
temperature continued increasing (it was morning after all and last night
was cold) but the rate of increased temporarily slowed at 10:00am, matching
the time of maximum magnitude of the eclipse (when the temperature was
10.7C).

A chart from midnight today is he

http://www.canterburyweather.co.uk/d...h=10&year=2005

Jonathan
Canterbury



During the August 1999 total eclipse in Cornwall (totality around 11:11 BST)
the temperature dropped around 2 degrees in Penzance, but started recovering
so after the eclipse became partial. That was with quite thick cloud. During
totality it actually felt much colder than it was.


Not temperature but light levels, a correspondent kindly shared the
figures from their datalogger on a Cornish hilltop in 1999, in
explanation of why I was totally surprised that while things became
noticeably gloomier as the eclipse progressed, it wasn't until close to
totality that things started to fall of a cliff so to speak. There's a
plot on this page:

http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/leopol...e/eclipse.html

Dave Liquorice October 3rd 05 11:04 PM

[WR] Temperature during eclipse in Kent
 
On Mon, 03 Oct 2005 22:16:04 +0100, Mark Annand wrote:

I was totally surprised that while things became noticeably gloomier
as the eclipse progressed, it wasn't until close to totality that
things started to fall of a cliff so to speak.


When you see the shadow from space it's obvious:

http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap990830.html

{light level} There's a plot on this page:


Fascinating.

--
Cheers
Dave. pam is missing e-mail




Kate Brown October 4th 05 08:26 AM

[WR] Temperature during eclipse in Kent
 
In article om, dated
Tue, 4 Oct 2005, Dave Liquorice wrote
On Mon, 03 Oct 2005 22:16:04 +0100, Mark Annand wrote:

I was totally surprised that while things became noticeably gloomier
as the eclipse progressed, it wasn't until close to totality that
things started to fall of a cliff so to speak.


When you see the shadow from space it's obvious:

http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap990830.html

{light level} There's a plot on this page:


Fascinating.

What I noticed very strongly in August 1999 and to a slightly lesser
extent yesterday was the change in the spectrum - the reds in particular
seemed to leach out of the colours. Did anyone else have the same
experience?

--
Kate B

PS 'elvira' is spamtrapped - please reply to 'elviraspam' at cockaigne if you want
to reply personally

Graham Easterling October 4th 05 06:48 PM

[WR] Temperature during eclipse in Kent
 

"Mark Annand" wrote in message
et...
Graham Easterling wrote:

During the August 1999 total eclipse in Cornwall (totality around 11:11
BST) the temperature dropped around 2 degrees in Penzance, but started
recovering so after the eclipse became partial. That was with quite thick
cloud. During totality it actually felt much colder than it was.


Not temperature but light levels


The period of darkness was very sharply defined, but the temperature at my
station did fall just over 2 degrees in around 40 minutes.

Graham





All times are GMT. The time now is 09:41 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2006 WeatherBanter.co.uk