Message from @Akhanyatin

Discord ID: 601147081477980191


2019-07-17 20:05:05 UTC  

So if flat earth was true, flying from one to the other would require you to fly over most of earth

2019-07-17 20:05:26 UTC  

But in reality you just fly right over Antarctica and get there in a few hours

2019-07-17 20:05:52 UTC  

where did you get 40-50 hours from?

2019-07-17 20:08:43 UTC  

Just an educated guess

2019-07-17 20:09:18 UTC  

Should be clear that whatever amount of time it takes to actually make that flight wouldn't be possible on a flat earth

2019-07-17 20:10:27 UTC  

@the21cat So you're saying hot air rises and causes the wind?
also, since it's rising, it's getting closer to the sun (source of heat), so why does it cool down?

2019-07-17 20:10:33 UTC  

I think 40-50 hours may be a little off when you consider that the WR for circumnavigating the earth is 67 hours

2019-07-17 20:12:56 UTC  

Welp, that only drives home my point

2019-07-17 20:13:45 UTC  

@NinjaApple where did you get that info? also, what was the path taken?

2019-07-17 20:14:35 UTC  

I just searched on google "How fast can you circumnavigate the earth" And looked at the top result

2019-07-17 20:15:17 UTC  

Some FEers believe there's more land and resources beyond the ice wall.

2019-07-17 20:15:45 UTC  

"Essentially, the answer depends on the rules of the game. The record for circumnavigating the world within our own atmosphere was set back in 1992 by Air France, who made the trip in the Concorde in a little under 33 hours"

2019-07-17 20:16:11 UTC  

The Concorde is a supersonic plane

2019-07-17 20:16:43 UTC  

I honestly have no idea what the path taken was

2019-07-17 20:18:31 UTC  

Hey, guys i find Epstein in white house logs

2019-07-17 20:18:59 UTC  

??

2019-07-17 20:19:04 UTC  

he's trolling

2019-07-17 20:19:30 UTC  

If you're going to troll at least be funny

2019-07-17 20:22:57 UTC  

so I asked a question earlier but it took so long to answer that I had to go and the guy who answered left, maybe someone else can answer.
How does wind work in FE, how are different weather possible?

2019-07-17 20:23:02 UTC  

For some reason. It won't let me post a screenshot on here

2019-07-17 20:23:52 UTC  

you're a new member, you probably don't have the permissions

2019-07-17 20:25:16 UTC  

Fair enough

2019-07-17 20:37:21 UTC  

@Akhanyatin hotter air than surroundings is created in certain places with high sunlight (i would presume high pressure spots mainly). These areas then get very hot and the air rises because of convection. That creates a low pressure which creates wind

2019-07-17 20:37:48 UTC  

Bad connection rn sry

2019-07-17 20:39:12 UTC  

ok but how does the air cool down? (it has to get back down eventually does it not?)

2019-07-17 20:39:21 UTC  

In the troposphere as you go higher the temp goes down

2019-07-17 20:39:34 UTC  

why? you're getting closer to the sun

2019-07-17 20:39:46 UTC  

isn't the sun close to earth?

2019-07-17 20:41:27 UTC  

Its actually direct vs indirect sunlight not closeness to the sun that determines heat. I only say this because you are a global earther

2019-07-17 20:42:52 UTC  

I cant give an exact answer for why its getting colder, but its evident through weather balloons and we can see the peaks of mountains get much colder

2019-07-17 20:43:31 UTC  

Im sure there is some research that would say why

2019-07-17 20:44:09 UTC  

could it be because of a pressure difference?

2019-07-17 20:44:18 UTC  

Wrong

2019-07-17 20:44:50 UTC  

Possibly. I think gay lussac or one of those laws said something about temp and pressure

2019-07-17 20:45:01 UTC  

Wrong once again

2019-07-17 20:45:15 UTC  

@Mono no its not

2019-07-17 20:45:21 UTC  

But it is

2019-07-17 20:45:36 UTC  

i agree with @Mono if im being honest

2019-07-17 20:45:43 UTC  

Temp and pressure are related

2019-07-17 20:46:01 UTC  

Ill get the law real quick

2019-07-17 20:46:08 UTC  

Indeed but not the wat you put it