Message from @SunRazor

Discord ID: 632011749054218260


2019-10-11 00:17:38 UTC  

Thank you!

2019-10-11 00:17:52 UTC  

oakheart, sorry

2019-10-11 00:17:53 UTC  

How wouldn't it matter.

2019-10-11 00:18:10 UTC  

The gravity just isn't adding up.

2019-10-11 00:19:21 UTC  

Only the relative speed matters. And as far as how much the rotation of the Earth matters only affects centripetal acceleration (or if you want to say, centrifugal). And even at 1000 mph at the equator, the resulting centripetal acceleration is insignificant compared to the rate that things fall.

2019-10-11 00:23:56 UTC  

The bumps you feel while driving down the road have more acceleration with them than the centripetal acceleration of Earth's rotation. At the 'accepted' speed of Earth's rotation, it's just not significant enough. Also, the rotation of Earth doesn't have anything to do with gravity.

2019-10-11 00:25:07 UTC  

As far as you know =)

2019-10-11 00:25:15 UTC  

As far as I know.

2019-10-11 00:25:57 UTC  

Show us an experiment proving this spinning globe earth?

2019-10-11 00:26:01 UTC  

^

2019-10-11 00:26:02 UTC  

We r interested

2019-10-11 00:26:06 UTC  

I am intrigued.

2019-10-11 00:26:08 UTC  

No doubt.

2019-10-11 00:26:39 UTC  

You've come up with a better defense to the globe theory than any of the other false pretenders.

2019-10-11 00:27:18 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/538929818834698260/632011309893812234/images.png

2019-10-11 00:28:01 UTC  

*"The temperature in the exosphere varies greatly and can range from 0 to over 1700 degrees Celsius. It is colder at night and much hotter during the day. The air in the exosphere is very thin, and is made up mostly of helium, and hydrogen."* - www.softschools.com

2019-10-11 00:28:12 UTC  

Soooo

2019-10-11 00:28:29 UTC  

How again can people fly out of the earth?

2019-10-11 00:28:33 UTC  

Plus entrance heat.

2019-10-11 00:28:33 UTC  

The 'core' claim I'm making is that *it does not matter if the Earth is rotating at all*, unless the Earth is rotating rapid enough for the resulting centripetal acceleration to be comparable to the acceleration of gravity.

2019-10-11 00:29:03 UTC  

it's not the 1000 mph that matters

2019-10-11 00:29:53 UTC  

The acceleration of gravity doesn't exceed 1000mph though.

2019-10-11 00:30:02 UTC  

1000 mph is not acceleration

2019-10-11 00:30:53 UTC  

a = v^2 / r, where a is centripetal acceleration, v is tangential speed, and r is radius (or distance from center of rotation)

2019-10-11 00:31:41 UTC  

convert 1000 mph to feet per second

2019-10-11 00:32:14 UTC  

and plug in the radius of the earth in feet, and you get the centripetal acceleration in feet per second per second

2019-10-11 00:32:34 UTC  

I'm going to interject real quick with that meme

2019-10-11 00:32:42 UTC  

sorry, made some mistakes (corrected)

2019-10-11 00:32:55 UTC  

those temperatures are recorded in the *upper* atmosphere, and that is important for the following reason

2019-10-11 00:33:00 UTC  

K show that in an experiment

2019-10-11 00:33:05 UTC  

The gas pressure at that height is so low that the thermal mass of the gas molecules is almost zero. Yes, each molecule has a very high temperature, but there are so few of them that they just can't increase the temperature of the satellites very much.

2019-10-11 00:33:09 UTC  

or rockets

2019-10-11 00:33:12 UTC  

Recorded

2019-10-11 00:33:23 UTC  

You never recorded anything

2019-10-11 00:33:36 UTC  

let me find out how we got those temperatures

2019-10-11 00:33:47 UTC  

Yes do that

2019-10-11 00:35:01 UTC  

I can't find an answer, but somehow that figure was created for the meme posted

2019-10-11 00:35:17 UTC  

my guess would be some weathering device sent up to record temperatures

2019-10-11 00:35:43 UTC  

you mean a satellite?

2019-10-11 00:35:43 UTC  

Sent up by either NASA or FAKEX

2019-10-11 00:35:59 UTC  

somehow they got temperatures that you stated