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In Houston, the opening of the Hurricane Season also means very high
humidity. If viewed from space, Houston would look almost foggy because of
the thick water vapor in the air.
Comments are welcome.
PS... yeah, I know, I forgot the stars this time...
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Attachments:
Download 'houston high humidity.jpg' (516 KB)
Preview of image 'houston high humidity.jpg'
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"Sven Littkowski" <sve### [at] jamaica-focuscom> wrote in message
news:447f6aa0$1@news.povray.org...
> Yeah, you know, you forgot the stars this time...
>
> :-P
common misunderstanding. You can hardly see stars in a photograph of a
planet, otherwise the planet itself would be way too bright.
(in fact, this is one of the so called "proofs" that the moonlanding was
a fake: there are no stars visible in the photographs. However, the
fact that there are no stars visible, is more like a proof that it's
either real, or a well thought out fake)
cu!
--
#macro G(b,e)b+(e-b)*C/50#end#macro _(b,e,k,l)#local C=0;#while(C<50)
sphere{G(b,e)+3*z.1pigment{rgb G(k,l)}finish{ambient 1}}#local C=C+1;
#end#end _(y-x,y,x,x+y)_(y,-x-y,x+y,y)_(-x-y,-y,y,y+z)_(-y,y,y+z,x+y)
_(0x+y.5+y/2x)_(0x-y.5+y/2x) // ZK http://www.povplace.com
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"somebody" <x### [at] ycom> wrote:
> "EagleSun" <nomail@nomail> wrote
>
> > PS... yeah, I know, I forgot the stars this time...
>
> What stars?
Yeah I knew you wouldn't see any stars in a real situation... but I just
wanted to be artistic.
*whew* it's really hot and humid here (can you tell I'm from Houston?)
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EagleSun wrote:
> In Houston, the opening of the Hurricane Season also means very high
> humidity. If viewed from space, Houston would look almost foggy because of
> the thick water vapor in the air.
>
> Comments are welcome.
>
Talk about yer global warming!
Fun piece!
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