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Put a flat earthier into space

Just because it might be of general interest here, two images captured last night.

The second is not great, Saturn was low in the sky and as I was about to pack up, I spotted it and got one shot away before it dipped below a neighbours house. I may have brightened it too much to bring out the detai. There was a lot of mositure high in the air making things look a bit more washed out and blurred than they should be. It was reasonably warm. A really cold night without cloud would have been much better.

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Just because it might be of general interest here, two images captured last night.

The second is not great, Saturn was low in the sky and as I was about to pack up, I spotted it and got one shot away before it dipped below a neighbours house. I may have brightened it too much to bring out the detai. There was a lot of mositure high in the air making things look a bit more washed out and blurred than they should be. It was reasonably warm. A really cold night without cloud would have been much better.

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not taken from authority and them points of light look a bit planet like. you must be a liar and using cgi computer programmes. you absolute charlatan
It's the best kind
i like super freak, super freak better
 
Light year sun, won't you come, and wash away the raiiiin?
Did You just say.....

'kinell you did!

Have you never noticed that if you get two identical lamps and put them close to each other, it gets dark in between them? Common phenomenon that anyone can replicate in their homes.

I know that when I'm sitting watching telly with one lamp on, thinking "it's too bright in here", the obvious answer is to put ANOTHER lamp on in the opposite corner so that the light cancels out and the room gets darker.
 
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Light year sun, won't you come, and wash away the raiiiin?


Have you never noticed that if you get two identical lamps and put them close to each other, it gets dark in between them? Common phenomenon that anyone can replicate in their homes.

I know that when I'm sitting watching telly with one lamp on, thinking "it's too bright in here", the obvious answer is to put ANOTHER lamp on in the opposite corner so that the light cancels out and the room gets darker.
I think It's why it gets dark in winter, because of all the Christmas lights people put up.
 
You say that as if it’s a piece of piss but you know that’s impossible hence why you walked away from it the other day
It's far from impossible to make a map but to have it match a globe set up it has to be put back in order as it was before the globe was made.
 
Oh dear, so your detection experiments and reason for "knowing" it exists comes down to pretty much "it feels right".
Your entire globe, suns/stars, and all the rest of it comes down to it feeling right because you accept the stories, so using that as a stick poke is pointless.
This is a central vortex and not a new vortex like a plug hole to the centre.
It does make good sense when you get to grips with it. A global mindset will never get to grips with anything other than the globe.
And this is pressure that can't be detected and different from the general weather system pressure that does affect pressure gauges, barometers etc.
It is detected and always can be detected.

You can't track these waves of pressure with any instrument because I expect they are special.
I think you're talking about fictional gravity to be fair.

Essentially it is a fantasy you dreamed up.
The globe is the fantasy dreamed up.
And as for the last bit, there is no stacked gas in the cylinder.
In your opinion because I'm sure you think gas can just fill a cylinder and not stack.
I supposed filling a bucket with sand is not stacking grains.
Ok, you can think on those lines but you can see it has to be stacked.
It is all equal pressure that is why whichever way you turn it, the pressure gauge reads the same.
There's never true equal pressure. To have that you would require absolutely equal containers and also an exact equal external atmospheric stack or liquid stack. Neither offers exact equal pressure. There is always an attempt to equalise but it will never happen because vibration/friction and frequency of it inside the container and outside will never offer equalisation.

To have that you would need a perfect spherical cylinder and also a perfect external layered atmosphere for it to be in.
A perfect cylinder would be impossible and even if close would still offer you no way to gauge. and then there's no way external force can be uniform around that cylinder because it will always sit in a stack of layers with uneven pressure.
You need to think this one through. Pressure is not directional.
I've thought it through and I'm happy with it.
Pressure acts upon any dense mass that displaces it and is never truly equal.

As for directional, I don't know what you're getting at. Maybe elaborate on it.
 
Light year sun, won't you come, and wash away the raiiiin?


Have you never noticed that if you get two identical lamps and put them close to each other, it gets dark in between them? Common phenomenon that anyone can replicate in their homes.

I know that when I'm sitting watching telly with one lamp on, thinking "it's too bright in here", the obvious answer is to put ANOTHER lamp on in the opposite corner so that the light cancels out and the room gets darker.
I often shine a torch at the sun instead of wearing sunglasses.
 
Light year sun, won't you come, and wash away the raiiiin?


Have you never noticed that if you get two identical lamps and put them close to each other, it gets dark in between them? Common phenomenon that anyone can replicate in their homes.

I know that when I'm sitting watching telly with one lamp on, thinking "it's too bright in here", the obvious answer is to put ANOTHER lamp on in the opposite corner so that the light cancels out and the room gets darker.
Don't think of lamps, think of colour spectrum wavelengths.
 
Light year sun, won't you come, and wash away the raiiiin?


Have you never noticed that if you get two identical lamps and put them close to each other, it gets dark in between them? Common phenomenon that anyone can replicate in their homes.

I know that when I'm sitting watching telly with one lamp on, thinking "it's too bright in here", the obvious answer is to put ANOTHER lamp on in the opposite corner so that the light cancels out and the room gets darker.
Light can cancel out light, and one demonstration is the double-slit experiment:

On this, patches of light and dark can be created where two light waves interact to make destructive interference. But, to work the two light sources need to be the exact opposite.

Light is a wave so if you picture two waves colliding, if the two peaks collide you get a higher intensity light. But if a peak or a trough collide then they cancel each other out to zero. But if one of the light sources was only half the intensity of the other, it would not work. You might dim one light source by a half but that is it. There is also the issue of polarisation. It is easy to draw a light wave on paper as a 2d object. But if you imagine light from a lamp moving away from a bulb, some waves will be up and down, some will be left to right and the rest anywhere in between.

So to cancel each other out, light needs to be the same intensity, the same polarisation and sufficiently out of phase so peaks meet troughs. Because this is so complex to create, nobody has ever demonstrated the effect you describe where a lamp, screen or projector turns black by shining another equal and opposite image at it. Even two lasers pointed directly at each other are unlikely to do this. To work in the scenario of the moon being a reflection of the sun and for god only knows what reason, turning back on itself to cancel itself out, the moon would have to be exactly the same intensity as the sun. We know the intensity of both differ across the surface. The sun has sun spots, the moon has all the features we can see and the obvious one, it is not as bright. Then the final inconvenience to this fuckwittardry, you only get a solar eclipse during a new moon, where from the point of view on earth, the moon has zero intensity because the light side is that facing the sun. We fall into the shadow of the moon, we are on the dark side.

Then there is the other inconvenience. I'm saying this effect can be carefully manufactured in a lab to some degree (not a complete wipeout) because light is a wave. Except that is reality physics. We need to remember to apply fantasy physics to this cancel itself out daftness and remember that light doesn't travel at all and is not a wave. So it cancels itself out without actually moving.

Don't worry, this can be easily explained by stringing loads of sciency sounding words together that don't really go or having any meaning and having the smug satisfaction of a job well done. And I've just had the pleasing realisation that this effect we see is exactly the same as Del Boy's attempts at French. Mange Tout fly2u, mange tout.

Meanwhile back in reality, this is a handy conversation as we have a partial solar eclipse visible here on October 25th. Details available here:
What is notable is that London will see a different amount of the sun covered than Sunderland, exactly like you would expect if it were caused by one relatively close object passing in front of something much further away. The complete opposite of what would happen if it were an effect on a fixed screen, where everyone would see the same eclipse.

If you are interested in this, never look with the naked eye and sun glasses are not sufficient. You will seriously damage your eyes. If you search for eclipse glasses now, they will arrive in plenty of time to view this. If the weather holds, I'll try to get a few images of it and join it together into an animation.
 
Your entire globe, suns/stars, and all the rest of it comes down to it feeling right because you accept the stories, so using that as a stick poke is pointless.

It does make good sense when you get to grips with it. A global mindset will never get to grips with anything other than the globe.

It is detected and always can be detected.


I think you're talking about fictional gravity to be fair.


The globe is the fantasy dreamed up.

In your opinion because I'm sure you think gas can just fill a cylinder and not stack.
I supposed filling a bucket with sand is not stacking grains.
Ok, you can think on those lines but you can see it has to be stacked.

There's never true equal pressure. To have that you would require absolutely equal containers and also an exact equal external atmospheric stack or liquid stack. Neither offers exact equal pressure. There is always an attempt to equalise but it will never happen because vibration/friction and frequency of it inside the container and outside will never offer equalisation.

To have that you would need a perfect spherical cylinder and also a perfect external layered atmosphere for it to be in.
A perfect cylinder would be impossible and even if close would still offer you no way to gauge. and then there's no way external force can be uniform around that cylinder because it will always sit in a stack of layers with uneven pressure.

I've thought it through and I'm happy with it.
Pressure acts upon any dense mass that displaces it and is never truly equal.

As for directional, I don't know what you're getting at. Maybe elaborate on it.
Either prove it or find multiple sources where it has been independently verified.

We all know you can not. You invented this and have convinced yourself you can feel it. You have not done a single scientific experiment, you just think it exists without any proof. That is the very definition of a fantasy until it can be proven otherwise.
 
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