User:AluminiumWithAnI/sandbox

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Unfinished articles and experiments go here

Kepler-93b stuff[edit]

Nomenclature and history[edit]

KOI-69.01 was first identified as a candidate exoplanet (KIC 3544595) in 2011[1].

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference Ballard et al. 2015 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

WASP-193b[edit]

Might go in Draft:WASP-193b

WASP-193b is a hot, transiting gas giant planet located approximately 1,232 light-years (378 pc) away in the constellation of Hydra, orbiting the F-type star WASP-193. Its discovery was made by the WASP-South transit survey and was announced in July 2023. The planet is extremely bloated, with a radius nearly 50% larger than Jupiter despite having only 14% of its mass.

Pacific Typhoons[edit]

some additions with cites

In September 989, a typhoon struck Kyoto and caused severe damage in Heian-kyō[1] and across Japan, destroying numerous buildings and killing many, which was described as an "unprecedented disaster" in a historical text.[2] Strong winds damaged vegetation as far as Echigo Province (modern-day Niigata Prefecture).[2]

  1. ^ Katahira, Hirofumi (January 2017). "12~13世紀における平安京北辺の風景とその変化" [Historical Landscape in the Northern Part of Heian-kyo in the 12th and 13th Centuries] (PDF). The Journal of Cultural Sciences (in Japanese). 649. 立命館大学人文学会 [Ritsumeikan University Humanities Society]: 274. NAID 40021095711. Retrieved 2024-05-28.
  2. ^ a b Fujiki, Hisashi (November 2007). 日本中世気象災害史年表稿 (PDF) (in Japanese). Koshi Shoin. p. 21. ISBN 9784862150318. NCID BA83558467. Retrieved 2024-05-28.
  • 1775 Typhoon

Around 1775, a catastrophic typhoon, sometimes referred to as Typhoon Lengkieki, hit the atolls of Pingelap and Mokil in the Caroline Islands, and, combined with a following famine, induced a population bottleneck.[1][2] Generations later, the Pingelapese, and the Mokilese to a lesser extent, have an unusually high incidence of achromatopsia,[2] as a consequence of one of the survivors carrying the recessive alleles for the disease,[1] which increased in frequency due to the founder effect and inbreeding.[3]

  1. ^ a b Val C. Sheffield (2000). "The vision of Typhoon Lengkieki". Nature Medicine. 6 (7): 746–7. doi:10.1038/77465. PMID 10888918. S2CID 27457738.
  2. ^ a b Morton, N. E.; Lew, R.; Hussels, I. E.; Little, G. F. (May 1972). "Pingelap and Mokil Atolls: historical genetics". American Journal of Human Genetics. 24 (3): 277–89. PMC 1762283. PMID 4537352.
  3. ^ Cabe, Paul R. (2004). "Inbreeding and Assortive Mating". Encyclopedia of genetics. Vol. 2ed.
  • Typhoon Ellen (1973)

Typhoon Ellen formed as a disturbance on July 16 in the vicinity of Okinotorishima[a].

JMA July 1973 summary 1973 Annual Typhoon Report

  1. ^ Derived from the coordinates of Okinotorishima (20°25′21″N 136°05′24″E / 20.4225°N 136.0900°E / 20.4225; 136.0900) and that of Ellen at formation (20°00′N 136°03′E / 20.00°N 136.05°E / 20.00; 136.05)[1] using the Latitude/Longitude Distance Calculator provided by the NHC.
  1. ^ "1973 Typhoon Ellen (1973197N20136)". International Best Track Archive for Climate Stewardship. Retrieved 2024-05-29.