Message from @🎃 Spookmaster Jaqula 🎃

Discord ID: 602302821605572609


2019-07-21 00:50:05 UTC  

so how does this work with norway? the sun doesnt set in norway for 60 days during summer so plz explain

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484514023698726912/602301238100361226/image0.gif

2019-07-21 00:50:30 UTC  

it looks like everything would get a full 24 hours

2019-07-21 00:50:35 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484514023698726912/602301363883474952/fesun.jpg

2019-07-21 00:50:59 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484514023698726912/602301465943605258/Eclipse.jpg

2019-07-21 00:51:45 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484514023698726912/602301659015806986/image0-1.png

2019-07-21 00:51:55 UTC  

The one with the sun and moon just before learning curve joined is completely explainable as the sun's light will not reach that side of the moon

2019-07-21 00:52:06 UTC  

Look at the angle to the sun that the moon is at

2019-07-21 00:52:33 UTC  

The "shadow" is still the wrong direction

2019-07-21 00:52:48 UTC  

No it's not

2019-07-21 00:52:51 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484514023698726912/602301932933218304/325.jpg

2019-07-21 00:52:56 UTC  

It's not the Earth's shadow

2019-07-21 00:53:01 UTC  

It's the lack of light

2019-07-21 00:53:47 UTC  

So you are saying the sunlight going in all directions in the globe model isn't lighting the moon which has a position over the earth

2019-07-21 00:54:42 UTC  

No I'm saying the light cannot reach the side of the moon that isn't facing the sun enough to illuminate it like the side of the moon in the sun

2019-07-21 00:54:58 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484514023698726912/602302469346820118/curvenah.jpg

2019-07-21 00:55:17 UTC  

No need

2019-07-21 00:55:33 UTC  

That makes no sense if you are dealing with omni directional light

2019-07-21 00:55:41 UTC  

Well it does

2019-07-21 00:55:54 UTC  

Light travels in all directions I never said it bends and curves

2019-07-21 00:56:17 UTC  

If that were the case the shadow would go in the opposite direction

2019-07-21 00:56:22 UTC  

No

2019-07-21 00:56:27 UTC  

There is no shadow

2019-07-21 00:56:31 UTC  

That's my point

2019-07-21 00:56:40 UTC  

light does infact bend and it bends around things that are spheres

2019-07-21 00:56:44 UTC  

It's literally the lack of light reaching that point

2019-07-21 00:56:45 UTC  

So the moon darkened itself

2019-07-21 00:56:50 UTC  

It can bend yes

2019-07-21 00:56:54 UTC  

But not in this case

2019-07-21 00:57:15 UTC  

Because omni directional light doesn't stop randomly from a. Continuous source

2019-07-21 00:57:17 UTC  

Around things that are spheres with different light refractive indexes aswell

2019-07-21 00:57:32 UTC  

im fairly sure this question can be answered with a quick google search

2019-07-21 00:57:45 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484514023698726912/602303166649860096/Google3.png

2019-07-21 00:58:14 UTC  

What is the earth flat @eletrick33

2019-07-21 00:58:28 UTC  

idk im not a flat earther

2019-07-21 00:58:44 UTC  

Yeah im asking should I just search it in google

2019-07-21 00:58:58 UTC  

sure

2019-07-21 00:59:02 UTC  

Polaris isn't fixed. It actually has a slight rotation.

2019-07-21 00:59:45 UTC  

I cannot send a screenshot I have missing permissions it says no it's roughly a sphere

2019-07-21 01:00:47 UTC  

<:n_:507995520724369431> <:b_:507995503397699585> <:a_:507995510624354305>

2019-07-21 01:00:58 UTC  

Polaris does move you are correct just significantly less than other stars in the sky

2019-07-21 01:01:52 UTC  

It's close to the north celestial pole, but not exact.