Hello there everyone. I was just outside having a smoke and I looked up at the moon, and for some reason it looks to have a cross or a plus around it. Two rays casting off left and right, and two rays casting off up and down. I chalked this up to the screen I was standing behind and shook it, but they did not move. I stepped off the porch and it was still there. I called my sister out to look at it and she too could see the cross on the moon. Now... maybe it’s just an atmospheric anomaly. I was just wondering if anyone else is seeing the same thing tonight. God bless you all!
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why are temperatures colder in direct moonlight than in a shadow?
Probably because when you're in direct moonlight there's no insulation to help keep the temperatures higher, whoever might've done the observation might not have considered this.
I don't think there's been that heavy of a study done on this but I'm going to gamble that insulation is the factor with whatever you're talking about.
I highly doubt moonlight brings a negative energy. I do think that moonlight would not bring any sort of heat with it since it's attenuated indirect light. The analogy might be an LED light vs an incandescent light.
Nailed it. In meteorology it's called terrestrial radiation.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HPdLouSlB34
Have you measured that, or is it something you heard?
Asking because your question assumes that it's true.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HPdLouSlB34
That was not any proof. There was a red area and a blue area, but there was no context. There was no proof that it was even at night, let alone under moonlight. And the temp varied backward from what he was saying part of the time.
I just checked night before last in a near full moon and could tell no difference between moonlight and shadow. Logic would say that would be little difference, but slightly higher in the light, all other things being equal.
That video was not exactly a controlled setup.
So "Why?" is question without a proven premise.
cmon man, just check the guys channel...he's legit...would have no reason to fake something like that. Seriously if your best explanation is to pull a trick from Saul Alinski's play book and attack the source, well, that's pretty weak...and pretty lame. Maybe you should put a bit more effort into figuring out WHY MOONLIGHT IS COLD
Ground cooling due to terrestrial radiation (radiating heat) with no insulation. Foliage cover would be acting as insulation. It is a subject in Meteorology for aviation qualifications.