Message from @tripolarbear
Discord ID: 563245469250093071
maybe you should be arguing with someone who has a physics degree and knows a thing or two about physics
@tripolarbear Guess what all engineers model a flat non rotating Earth
I'm currently getting a degree in Physics and Chemical Engineering
no one said anything was a perfect vacuum
they dont
frequently
and in larger bridge designs they need to account for the curve
@Derek Nelson can you name me an engineer who DOESN'T model a flat non rotating Earth?
@tripolarbear May I see the architectural blue prints that accounted for curvature please?
Are you deliberately ignoring the whole part about "may be assumed" ?
Do you know what a manifold is?
@Human Sheeple Nope.
how about you find it you guys seem to be the ones invested in it
It's a geometric object that locally resembles Euclidean space
@tripolarbear So you don't have any proof then
For example, a circle is a manifold that locally resembles a line.
And a sphere is a manifold that locally resembles a 2D plane
i just cant be bothered
and that guy seems to be qouting facebook
Which is why over short areas, the Earth can be treated as flat because locally it approaches 2D Euclidean space
just because you can find proof doesnt mean its legit
@tripolarbear "I can't be bothered" means "you don't have any proof"
then can you find blueprints for it?
if i "dont have any proof"
I've got an observable testable repeatable experiment to show Earth is Flat. you do not. Burden of proof is on YOU to show my spirit level is WRONG
He doesn’t have to disprove what you can’t prove.
That video is working off of the assumption that rockets are propelled forward by gas pushing off of something.
That's not how rockets work.
THE RAPID MOTION AND COLLISIONS OF MOLECULES WITH THE WALLS OF THE CONTAINER "CAUSES" GAS PRESSURE: https://imgur.com/a/IoZI0kk
I really don't want to repeat myself again
Its getting really old
Correct they don't produce meaningful thrust in a vacuum
BALLOON ROCKETS DO NOT PUSH OFF A VACUUM: https://imgur.com/C8Y0NCn
What is thrust?