Message from @Moist Mayonnaise

Discord ID: 493084661644525569


2018-09-22 15:39:21 UTC  

Basically, Mike.

2018-09-22 15:39:22 UTC  

yes.

2018-09-22 15:39:31 UTC  

I need to check my ground harness every day

2018-09-22 15:39:31 UTC  

or at least stop wasting so much money on it

2018-09-22 15:39:45 UTC  

https://www.spaceanswers.com/astronomy/how-does-a-telescope-work/

They are not building 15 miles long telescopes. They make the lens bigger to capture more light.

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484515890759729182/493083995404238857/512px-Comparison_optical_telescope_primary_mirrors-4.png

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484515890759729182/493083995891040266/Screenshot_20180922-083855_Chrome.jpg

2018-09-22 15:39:46 UTC  

what about SpaceX? blue origin? etc? :v

2018-09-22 15:39:52 UTC  

if entertainment, like star wars and star trek

2018-09-22 15:39:54 UTC  

what about SpaceX? blue origin? etc? :v

2018-09-22 15:39:56 UTC  

science fiction

2018-09-22 15:40:17 UTC  

Some of those are not even built yet

2018-09-22 15:41:34 UTC  

Apply your skepticism of flat earth to the heliocentric globe model and youll begin to see the problems

2018-09-22 15:41:40 UTC  

guys, are you familiar with the history of the telescope

2018-09-22 15:41:48 UTC  

france built this huge telescope

2018-09-22 15:41:58 UTC  

now its in the P900, same viewing distance

2018-09-22 15:42:03 UTC  

our tech increases

2018-09-22 15:42:11 UTC  

we can see further

2018-09-22 15:42:13 UTC  

ahh the p900

2018-09-22 15:42:16 UTC  

The sacred camera

2018-09-22 15:42:19 UTC  

xD

2018-09-22 15:42:22 UTC  

Its capturing more light

2018-09-22 15:42:24 UTC  

Anyway. Since Citizen Z clearly doesn't actually how light works, here is a simulation I've just written of how light actually works: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=231arqxJaqY&feature=youtu.be

You **can** distinguish two spots superimposed from two light beams from just a single brighter spot from one beam

2018-09-22 15:42:28 UTC  

Its simple

2018-09-22 15:43:18 UTC  

history talks about this huge telescope they once built

2018-09-22 15:43:32 UTC  

didn't see it glancing thru that wiki

2018-09-22 15:43:34 UTC  

When you overlap two beams of light, their intensities do **not** superimpose. Their electric fields do, which contain phase information, which can distinguish two spots overlapping from one bright spot.

2018-09-22 15:43:57 UTC  

or, the telescope called ▬► "LUCIFER" lol smfh...

2018-09-22 15:44:07 UTC  

there's the name thing again

2018-09-22 15:44:08 UTC  

smh

2018-09-22 15:44:14 UTC  

Large telescopes capture more light than small telescopes...more light means that dimmer objects are visible, and there is more light to be analysed

2018-09-22 15:44:27 UTC  

👁

2018-09-22 15:44:33 UTC  

spooky...

2018-09-22 15:44:38 UTC  

Read what i wrote

2018-09-22 15:44:44 UTC  

real eYe does too..

2018-09-22 15:44:50 UTC  

more light means you can see further

2018-09-22 15:45:32 UTC  

there is a trick you can do if you need glasses

2018-09-22 15:45:42 UTC  

take your finger and make a small square and look thru it

2018-09-22 15:45:44 UTC  

you can see further

2018-09-22 15:45:56 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484515890759729182/493085550685978625/20180725_191520.png

2018-09-22 15:46:15 UTC  

Why don't flat earthers care about the truth