On January 15, 2022 at 9:23 pm, my sensor recorded an anomalous surge and decline in air pressure in Moscow.
Surprisingly, this is a blast wave from the eruption of the underwater volcano Hunga-Tonga-Hunga-Khapaai in the Pacific Ocean in the Kingdom of Tonga.
At 05:22 on January 16, there was another surge from the second shock wave. Here are the statistics of measurements of my sensor on "People's monitoring".
I will quote fast Sergei Martynov on Facebook:
"I took a look at the smart home charts before going to bed... and saw that in the evening there was an unusual surge in atmospheric pressure. Usually the pressure does not change so quickly, especially since there is some kind of obvious fluctuation... like a blast wave?
I thought about how to check, I remembered the narodmon site, where enthusiasts post data from their sensors. I see the same fluctuation is on other sensors around Moscow. Looked further - and there it is. Then I noticed that in time they occur at different moments, as if some kind of wave swept from east to west.
Here's what the pressure surge looked like in Kamchatka (Moscow time on all charts, UTC+3).
By 20 o'clock Moscow time, the wave reached the capital of Kazakhstan.
In area 21, as can be seen on my charts, I passed Moscow, and by 22 we reached Dublin (to the west of the sensors on narodmon was no longer found).
Well, here I got to read the news - and it turned out that a few hours ago an underwater volcano exploded in Oceania!
Here's an awesome video! Until recently, it was hard to even imagine that such a picture could be seen - and this is not computer graphics, but really photographs (spliced together from pieces, of course).
https://www.youtube.com/watch? v=v2TlhBT9fuQ
By the way, the video shows two shock waves, as far as I understand, only the first has reached us - the second is coming slower, maybe we will see it tomorrow (Aleksey Nadezhin: Sergey wrote his post at night, and in the morning the second wave reached to Moscow).
It would seem that somewhere on the other side of the globe something exploded - and we are watching it here. How small is this ball after all... ".
For ten years I have been writing every day about technology, discounts, interesting places and events. Read my blog site ammo1.ru, v Learn, Zen, Mirtesen, Telegram.
My projects:
lamptest.ru. I test LED lamps and help you figure out which ones are good and which are not so good.
Elerus.ru. I collect information about domestic electronic devices for personal use and share it.
You can contact me on Telegram @ammo1 and by mail [email protected].