Message from @Ætos
Discord ID: 549117722349535237
Also, if you put your finger on the starting point, you’ll see some slight leaning to the left
Though not great
I’m just observing that no matter where you position the camera, the sun should have turned slightly at some point from being stationary.
Let me look at the video again, maybe I can see that turn if I look a bit closer.
It is turning, it’s just not gonna be as “radical” as we’d think
If you put a line through the middle of the sun, as it shrinks in that video, both sides stay the same size.
I see it going to the left
If you put a line on the edge, it does look like it’s turning since the edge of the sun is slowly tracking away from the line.
I traced a line on the starting point
I wish I could demonstrate it, but I don’t really know how.
With your drawing tool
Yeah, I think this one needs to be more precise than I can do with that, lol
We both saw how bad my drawings are, lmao
Lmao
This image sort of gets at what I mean, even if it’s meant for something completely different:
Welp lol
One of those dotted line last cuts both circles in half
The one that gets close to the “X”
Yeah I see it
How are you relating it with the video? I’m trying to understand
As in, the lines you want to explain
Where you’d put the sun’s movement in that graphic?
To see if I get you
I’m trying to figure out how to rotate the stupid thing to show what I mean
You’re saying the “edge” of th small circle is always going to touch the red line even if it shrinks?
This might help, I redid the lines and added one that’s pretty important.
So, in this image, imagine that the circle is the sun, as we see it from earth. It’s basically a big circle.
The green line represents the surface of the ground, or horizon. You’ll have to mentally tilt the image to make it match a normal ground level perspective
The blue line represents a line at a right angle, perfectly perpendicular to the ground.
If I make a straight line perpendicular to the ground that touches the very edge of the sun’s circle, then as the sun gets smaller, it will pull away from that line.
Now, if we put a perpendicular line in the center of the circle, then as the sun’s circle gets smaller, both halves of the circle will be the same size as each other.
That line is the dotted line that gets close to the “X”,
The distance from the blue line I drew to the red line basically just shows how far from the original size edge the smaller circle will be.
As the circle gets smaller, that distance gets bigger, the red and blue lines are farther apart.
What it shows (or as I am trying to make it show), is that as the sun gets farther away, if it were to turn, then that middle line should be changing. It shouldn’t divide the sun as well as it does in that video.
I understood you, but I disagree with the part of “both halves will be the same size”
One is going to be greater
They won’t be the same size as the original, but both should get smaller at the same rate, and maintain the same size.