Message from @jeremy

Discord ID: 569251115644747786


2019-04-20 19:48:47 UTC  

they shouldnt be slanted at all why would we point to the center we are on the surface

2019-04-20 19:48:54 UTC  

You have to reposition the line to a

2019-04-20 19:48:59 UTC  

no in ur pic from a to b is a 24 inch drop

2019-04-20 19:49:20 UTC  

ur 8 inches down then it goes 24 inches down

2019-04-20 19:49:23 UTC  

Not if the line is tangent on a, then it is 8 inches from a to b

2019-04-20 19:51:05 UTC  

u have a tangent line on top we are trying to figure out the drop amount as u go around the curve. the lines should be going straight up not slanted i feel

2019-04-20 19:53:01 UTC  

Like I said, this isn't to scale. It should point straight down, you are right, but the 7.98 value is pretty much correct since over one mile, the earth curves a tiny fraction of a degree where straight down and slanted are very nearly the same

2019-04-20 19:53:21 UTC  

u said we have to reposition the line to a but real world scenario we could have people in all spots and dont have to reposition anyone

2019-04-20 19:53:39 UTC  

idk im having doubts about this 8 inches per mile squared thing

2019-04-20 19:57:00 UTC  

@Citizen Z same thing, the text of that image is still wrong

2019-04-20 19:57:19 UTC  

your mind must be making up that you're seeing something that isn't ther

2019-04-20 19:58:05 UTC  

@AstralSentient @jeremy the exact equation for how a circle distances away from a tangent line is R[1-cos(d/R]

2019-04-20 19:58:10 UTC  

But each observer in their own position has their own line. Relative to each observer, 1 mile is 8 inch drop

2019-04-20 19:58:17 UTC  

that is approximately 8*d^2

2019-04-20 19:58:34 UTC  

ok frolic just gave us a different equation for the curvature

2019-04-20 19:58:48 UTC  

8*d^2 is an approximation, tha'ts a parabola

2019-04-20 19:59:01 UTC  

it's close but not exact, exact formula is that of a circle

2019-04-20 20:00:14 UTC  

it's weird taht when flat earhers say "8 inches per mile squared" they can't write the proper equation to describe what they're saying

2019-04-20 20:00:25 UTC  

their words sound like h=8/d^2

2019-04-20 20:00:27 UTC  

ur formula is squared too

2019-04-20 20:00:42 UTC  

dont u have to have an equal amount of curve in each mile though

2019-04-20 20:00:43 UTC  

but what they're trying to say is h=8d^2

2019-04-20 20:00:47 UTC  

What do you mean by "close but not exact"?

2019-04-20 20:01:00 UTC  

compare the two equations, do they give exactly the same result as a function of d?

2019-04-20 20:01:11 UTC  

ur saying their is more curve sometimes in some places if u square it

2019-04-20 20:01:33 UTC  

no i'm saying the equation that flerfers use, is a parabola, not a circle

2019-04-20 20:01:47 UTC  

thus it can't be an exact measure of how much a circle curves away from a tangent line

2019-04-20 20:01:49 UTC  

i dont think the formula should be squared at all

2019-04-20 20:01:59 UTC  

can you write teh formula that you think is accurate?

2019-04-20 20:02:03 UTC  

It works just fine for drop

2019-04-20 20:02:05 UTC  

their is an equal amount of curve in a circle for each unit

2019-04-20 20:02:09 UTC  

equal unit

2019-04-20 20:02:18 UTC  

no there isn't, not away from a tangent line

2019-04-20 20:02:22 UTC  

If it isn't squared, it is a sloped line

2019-04-20 20:02:27 UTC  

as you go further away, the circle gets further away from its tangent linle

2019-04-20 20:03:03 UTC  

go ahead and plot the two eqautions as a function of d, and use R=6371 km

2019-04-20 20:03:19 UTC  

so if u broke a 24k mile circle into 1 mile parts their is an equal amount of curve in each mile correct?

2019-04-20 20:03:34 UTC  

if you redefine your starting point each mile, yes

2019-04-20 20:03:50 UTC  

what if u had a person at each mile and didnt have to redifine ur point

2019-04-20 20:03:50 UTC  

but if you measure from teh same starting point, no, h would be larger for subsequent miles

2019-04-20 20:04:18 UTC  

each would measure teh same amount of curvature over one mile, b/c they're effectively starting at a new point, each mile, drawing a new tangent line