Message from @Σ5

Discord ID: 496609681729650688


2018-10-02 09:03:10 UTC  

the wave is traveling parelel to the gravient

2018-10-02 09:03:28 UTC  

the closer part of the wave will be traveling slower than the farther part

2018-10-02 09:03:38 UTC  

causing it to bend inward

2018-10-02 09:03:41 UTC  

it does make sense

2018-10-02 09:04:00 UTC  

temperature influences density

2018-10-02 09:04:18 UTC  

the fact is that earth is flat, and we see further than we should.

2018-10-02 09:04:56 UTC  

the IDEAL gas law shows that temperature influences density

2018-10-02 09:05:08 UTC  

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.

2018-10-02 09:05:56 UTC  

we have never seen a blackhole, its made up science fiction, all we have is CGI images.

2018-10-02 09:06:30 UTC  

pressure also influences density

2018-10-02 09:06:55 UTC  

and the weight of the atmosphere itself applies a pressure onto the atmosphere below it

2018-10-02 09:07:07 UTC  

according to einstien who has been proven false, light is a constant and doesn't change how fast it moves

2018-10-02 09:07:17 UTC  

creating a density gradient that decreases farther from earth

2018-10-02 09:07:45 UTC  

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.

2018-10-02 09:08:04 UTC  

even on a flat earth this phenomenon should still exist

2018-10-02 09:08:12 UTC  

atmospheric refraction

2018-10-02 09:08:33 UTC  

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

2018-10-02 09:08:45 UTC  

you have some mirage stuff going on with atmosphere, and some refraction.

2018-10-02 09:08:50 UTC  

you still have an atmospheric weight per area applying a pressure on the atmosphere below it

2018-10-02 09:09:19 UTC  

its not about applying pressure, its trying to see thru atmosphere that causes distortion the more you look thru

2018-10-02 09:09:34 UTC  

wavelengths are irelevant

2018-10-02 09:09:36 UTC  

why we have limited sight distances

2018-10-02 09:09:42 UTC  

they will bend the same no matter what

2018-10-02 09:09:51 UTC  

altho there is the effect of chromatic aberation

2018-10-02 09:10:11 UTC  

wich is where the refractive index depends on wavelength

2018-10-02 09:10:11 UTC  

well, we also have limited human sight, we can only see so far

2018-10-02 09:10:18 UTC  

there is no single function for this

2018-10-02 09:10:21 UTC  

its all measured

2018-10-02 09:10:43 UTC  

is there some conspiracy about refraction?

2018-10-02 09:10:56 UTC  

if flat earth existed then the horizon should be above eye level

2018-10-02 09:11:07 UTC  

I generally push one or so conspiracies, not stuff that isn't really debatable...

2018-10-02 09:11:11 UTC  

(ignoring haze)

2018-10-02 09:11:21 UTC  

horizon is at eye level

2018-10-02 09:11:27 UTC  

no matter how high you go

2018-10-02 09:11:30 UTC  

@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

2018-10-02 09:11:32 UTC  

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.

2018-10-02 09:11:39 UTC  

it stays at eye level because we live on flat earth

2018-10-02 09:11:47 UTC  

i have kevin blocked and i dident even look at his posts

2018-10-02 09:12:12 UTC  

well, that is smart, ignore the one flat earther in the room

2018-10-02 09:12:39 UTC  

no ignore the troll in the room

2018-10-02 09:12:41 UTC  

its not a law that shorter wavelengths are bent more