Message from @Σ5
Discord ID: 496611255436705792
I generally push one or so conspiracies, not stuff that isn't really debatable...
(ignoring haze)
horizon is at eye level
no matter how high you go
@Σ5 no no no, imagine I split a white ray of light and shine it across the horizon, if what Kevin says is true then certain colours must bend more
Each color has a different wavelength, and it bends differently from all other colors. Short wavelengths are slowed more sharply upon entering glass from air than are long wavelengths. Red light has the longest wavelength and is bent the least. Violet light has the shortest wavelength and is bent the most.
it stays at eye level because we live on flat earth
i have kevin blocked and i dident even look at his posts
well, that is smart, ignore the one flat earther in the room
no ignore the troll in the room
its not a law that shorter wavelengths are bent more
time to ignore sigma 5
there are cases where its the longer one that does so
They do bend more... Google it
moronic
its kinda hard to search for such a thing but il try
what?
there is no single equation for a material and the refractive index of wavelength curve
its all directly measured
Google how wavelength affects refractive index
Yup see
@Σ5 what is this?
@dumblebore 🌈 science
didn't ask u
thats a graph of refractive index of wavelength
of a specific material
ah
the curve is dependant on the material
is it like how much the ray of light bends upon hitting a surface?
you have to measure it at multiple wavelengths to get a rough approximation of teh curve
yes
higher refractive index the more the photons slow down
Anyway
n = refractive index
wait so FE don't believe in refraction right?
As light refracts at different angles based on the wavelength, according to Kevin's hypothesis, we should be able too see a rainbow (kinda) at the horizon
most
i watched a video of a flat earther saying that atmospheric refraction is false and then saying the curve of earth is false then he gets out a high zoom camera
videos a horizon with many objects