Message from @mineyful
Discord ID: 596463916574572544
Nine pictures of the Moon. Taken at the same time. The Moon is all over the place. The creators not in the same place in even two of the nine pictures.
@Steve Angell Here's a quick simulation I did up in After Effects
https://i.imgur.com/Px52sHC.png
probably because they were all taken from different perspective around the world
This was a round earth to prove the distance to the moon. It instead proved the moon is something other than a ball.
remember the military uses maybe 5x the money NASA uses
No
i meant the lightsource is changing position over time and lights up different parts of the moon at different times
so u blame it on NASA
200x
even worse
Idk
NASA 0.5% budget
NASA only gets 1/2 of a cent compared to the whole of Americas yearly budget
Look at the even lighting on a half moon.
so it's not NASAs fault
steve we went over phases a few days ago remember
Moon emits cold light
That is still a huge amount of money for a movie studio.
cold light doesn't exist
or just light rather
Why are objects in the moon light colder then objects in the shade @Happygrandad
it's still heat
light always contains energy, if it was cold it wouldn't have energy
theres a whole video explaining stuff about it
what is cold light and how does it differ from hot light
yes but the temperature under moonlight drops a little more than when not under moonlight
I am basically in agreement with moon phases as NASA would have it. Just not what we are seeing I disagree with.
When an object (or surface) is covered or shaded with a hand, roof, tree or cloud, it radiates less of its heat into the night air, and it will become slightly warmer than an object (or surface) that is exposed to the open night sky.
@Fran it’s cold
Moon emits it
how much colder is it
there's your answer
Their moon phases makes zero sense for the even lighting we see from the moon.
why is it colder
The Moon is flat not a ball.
it's possible to cover an object with moonlight without actually insulating it guys
so if moonlight makes a thermometer colder you can measure that
how do people detect this cold light
Temperatures of surfaces under an unobstructed night sky will lose more of their heat than surfaces with obstructions, roofs, trees or clouds over them, and this happens even on nights when the Moon isn't present
with a laser detector right?