![]() | Schumann resonances was a good articles nominee, but did not meet the good article criteria at the time. There may be suggestions below for improving the article. Once these issues have been addressed, the article can be renominated. Editors may also seek a reassessment of the decision if they believe there was a mistake. | |||||||||
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This section refers to the African "chimney" and other chimneys, without explaining what a chimney is supposed to be. Wi thout an explanation, the section might as well be LLM gibberish. MrDemeanour ( talk) 12:44, 17 July 2023 (UTC)
References
The first reference (Schumann Resonance from NASA) is a broken link, it redirects to the plain NASA website. I don't know if maybe Internet Archive has a saved version of the original reference or not, but thought I'd make note of that here in case someone has the time to look into that, as I don't. Moony483 ( talk) 03:52, 28 October 2023 (UTC)
You notice the image and the description have differing frequencies for the second order resonance? 2409:4073:200E:8B30:44C9:3771:2DD5:26B ( talk) 10:11, 21 November 2023 (UTC)
The Montinel source says:
"The average fundamental mode of resonance is around 7.8 Hz, and the rest of modes are 14, 20, 26, 33, 39, and 45 Hz with slight diurnal variation."
However, the wiki article's /*Description*/ currently says they "appear as distinct peaks at extremely low frequencies around 7.83 Hz (fundamental), 14.3, 20.8, 27.3, and 33.8 Hz" yet cites that Montinel source ( [1]) despite those numbers being different.
Whatever numbers wikipedia uses should be matched to the source. If we have different sources, then lets put that there are different sources that give different numbers and have the specific numbers matched to the specific citation. Em3rgent0rdr ( talk) 02:41, 2 May 2024 (UTC)
![]() | Schumann resonances was a good articles nominee, but did not meet the good article criteria at the time. There may be suggestions below for improving the article. Once these issues have been addressed, the article can be renominated. Editors may also seek a reassessment of the decision if they believe there was a mistake. | |||||||||
|
![]() | This article is rated C-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||||
|
This page has archives. Sections older than 30 days may be automatically archived by Lowercase sigmabot III when more than 4 sections are present. |
This section refers to the African "chimney" and other chimneys, without explaining what a chimney is supposed to be. Wi thout an explanation, the section might as well be LLM gibberish. MrDemeanour ( talk) 12:44, 17 July 2023 (UTC)
References
The first reference (Schumann Resonance from NASA) is a broken link, it redirects to the plain NASA website. I don't know if maybe Internet Archive has a saved version of the original reference or not, but thought I'd make note of that here in case someone has the time to look into that, as I don't. Moony483 ( talk) 03:52, 28 October 2023 (UTC)
You notice the image and the description have differing frequencies for the second order resonance? 2409:4073:200E:8B30:44C9:3771:2DD5:26B ( talk) 10:11, 21 November 2023 (UTC)
The Montinel source says:
"The average fundamental mode of resonance is around 7.8 Hz, and the rest of modes are 14, 20, 26, 33, 39, and 45 Hz with slight diurnal variation."
However, the wiki article's /*Description*/ currently says they "appear as distinct peaks at extremely low frequencies around 7.83 Hz (fundamental), 14.3, 20.8, 27.3, and 33.8 Hz" yet cites that Montinel source ( [1]) despite those numbers being different.
Whatever numbers wikipedia uses should be matched to the source. If we have different sources, then lets put that there are different sources that give different numbers and have the specific numbers matched to the specific citation. Em3rgent0rdr ( talk) 02:41, 2 May 2024 (UTC)