Message from @Σ5
Discord ID: 496607945753231360
Lol
😀
Nite all =)
the north pole is a magnetic south pole
lable it S for magnetic south
if you want
Yeah haha
its still the geographic north tho
only reason its called the north is becasue the notrh poles of a magnet point tward it
(actually other way arround but you get the point)
@Citizen Z wait how is there a south pole according to your model
i believe i was just kicked from a server for posting that image
jdssdf stop already ;-;
<:why:492975944445853696>
ok im curious
do some flat earthers think that what we mean by refraction that light bends toward the earth because its denser?
We know what you mean and it doesnt make sense
light is a wave
imagine a density gradient
the wave is traveling parelel to the gravient
the closer part of the wave will be traveling slower than the farther part
causing it to bend inward
it does make sense
temperature influences density
the fact is that earth is flat, and we see further than we should.
the IDEAL gas law shows that temperature influences density
we have never left low earth atmosphere, and free masons have tricked the public at large with psyops, NASA is a psyop that lies to the public.
we have never seen a blackhole, its made up science fiction, all we have is CGI images.
pressure also influences density
and the weight of the atmosphere itself applies a pressure onto the atmosphere below it
according to einstien who has been proven false, light is a constant and doesn't change how fast it moves
creating a density gradient that decreases farther from earth
there is no such thing as space, we live on flat earth, anything above the firmament is water as far as we know from the bible.
even on a flat earth this phenomenon should still exist
atmospheric refraction
Wait if you're saying we don't see across the horizon in a flat earth is because the light is bending towards the earth, then the waves with a smaller wavelengths should bend more than the ones with a larger wavelength
you have some mirage stuff going on with atmosphere, and some refraction.