sargeant wrote:
So let me get it straight in its elliptical orbit the earth being further from the sun in winter and nearer in summer has NOTHING to do with seasons
Quite Right! Let's examine a few facts that may help to make this more clear. First of all, let's agree on one thing, the Earth, as well as being in an orbit, is also spinning on it's own (tilted) Axis. The rotation takes approx 1 day.
Now, this year, on the 24 June, it was Midsummer's Day in the United Kingdom, Planet Earth. Therefore, according to your theory (not Milankovich), the Earth is at its closest to the Sun.... But wait a moment!
22 June this year was MidWinter's Day, in Australia, Planet Earth.
Woosh, did you feel that sudden shift in orbit? One day you could almost touch it, then, all of a sudden-like, there we are, an extra 3 Million miles away! All overnight!
sargeant wrote:
But a tilt of about a thousand miles or so does
Who said that? Not me. Tilt (angular Displacement) is measured in Degrees, not Miles! Its nothing to do with distance.
In 'Summer' due to Axial Tilt, those points on Earth, let's refer to the Northern Hemisphere (United Kingdom) is pointing towards the sun, whilst, the Southern Hemisphere (Australia) is now pointing away from the sun.
As a more extreme (actually as realistically extreme as you can possibly get), Polar Summer and Winter. Complete 24hr Darkness in Winter, complete 24hr sunlight in Summer - is this because in Winter the earth is so far from the North Pole that no light can possibly reach it? But at the same time it's Summer in Australia, and blisteringly hot, with 16 hours of sunlight (because the Planet is so close to the sun?). Of course note, it's because of the Axial Inclination of the poles toward and away from the Sun.
sargeant wrote:
IMHO that is totally illogical
Yes, I can see that, but there is not much I can do about that!
sargeant wrote:
Please tell how far is the sun from earth in summer and how far in winter
I think you must agree that it's a rather bizarre question. If you refer to the centre of the earth, I would guess that this is a trick question, and the answer is 'the distance is the same". Because whenever it is Summer on our Planet, it is also 'Winter' in the other Hemisphere, so these measurements would need to be taken on the same day.
sargeant wrote:
again IMHO a PALTRY 1,ooo miles is a small boys piss in the ocean when talking of the mega distances involved and certainly does not on its own explain one degree in winter and thirty plus degrees in summer
Sure, agree completely.... In summer, some days are hot, some days are quite cold. Some mornings are quite cold in summer, yet at lunch time can be quite hot. Are you telling me this is because the elliptical orbital trajectory of the planet has changes in a fews hours? Malankovich talks about a change in trajectory within a 95,000 yr cycle, not one that randomly jumps all over the countryside at will.
Would you not agree that Temperature is not the correct way to determine season? We have hot Winters, cold summers, Wet Summers, dry winters. Surely the only correct method to measure is daylight hours, Summer consistently has long daylight hours, whilst winter has consistently short daylight hours
sargeant wrote:
and this constant nit picking debate confirms my hypothesis
If you consider the complete misrepresentation of facts, or even hypotheses, as nit picking, then I couldn't agree more.
sargeant wrote:
BECAUSE THERE IS BUGGERALL MAN WILL DO ABOUT IT
Let's hope, for all of our sakes, that not everyone thinks like you