Message from @oMerric

Discord ID: 578019398254723100


2019-05-15 00:39:02 UTC  

well u should look into that before u start telling me what makes the shadow on the moon during a lunar eclipse

2019-05-15 00:39:17 UTC  

do a google search prolly i dont have that source off hand

2019-05-15 00:40:06 UTC  

I've got an article here

2019-05-15 00:40:16 UTC  

I'm only finding one thing about it

2019-05-15 00:40:20 UTC  

thx

2019-05-15 00:40:26 UTC  

Is that what you're talking about @jeremy?

2019-05-15 00:40:36 UTC  

its happened a lot throughout history

2019-05-15 00:40:43 UTC  

dont worry they have a magical excuse for it

2019-05-15 00:40:47 UTC  

Ahh

2019-05-15 00:40:48 UTC  

so ur in the clear

2019-05-15 00:40:52 UTC  

more globe magic

2019-05-15 00:41:02 UTC  

That article explains how it was possible

2019-05-15 00:41:09 UTC  

yes i know magic

2019-05-15 00:41:29 UTC  

Atmospheric refraction

2019-05-15 00:41:36 UTC  

yes

2019-05-15 00:41:42 UTC  

not magic

2019-05-15 00:41:55 UTC  

maybe maybe not

2019-05-15 00:42:12 UTC  

lets think about it

2019-05-15 00:42:36 UTC  

Atmospheric refraction is like when you put a stick in water and it looks like it's in a different place in the water, right? (If you get what I mean)

2019-05-15 00:42:43 UTC  

You realize that lunar eclipses can only be accurately predicted with a globe model, right?

2019-05-15 00:43:01 UTC  

the sun moon and earth are supposed to be in a straight line for a lunar eclipse but we can see the sun and moon in the sky so atmospheric refraction is taking the sun 90 degrees out of where it really is ?

2019-05-15 00:43:02 UTC  

PicklePot I guess

2019-05-15 00:43:35 UTC  

Well, was it a full eclipse?

2019-05-15 00:43:36 UTC  

atmospheric refraction is moving the sun thousands of miles

2019-05-15 00:43:48 UTC  

The light from the sun is being refracted so it looks displaced, although physically it is still behind the moon

2019-05-15 00:43:49 UTC  

magic

2019-05-15 00:44:04 UTC  

the sun is not behind the moon in a lunar eclipse

2019-05-15 00:44:13 UTC  

Light moves differently through gravity and space too

2019-05-15 00:44:19 UTC  

its supposed to be on th e opposite side of earth not behind the moon

2019-05-15 00:44:29 UTC  

jeremy is just going to claim gravity is only a theory

2019-05-15 00:44:29 UTC  

ur getting solar and lunar eclipse mied up

2019-05-15 00:44:32 UTC  

mixed u

2019-05-15 00:44:33 UTC  

up

2019-05-15 00:44:43 UTC  

Yeah my bad

2019-05-15 00:45:01 UTC  

What I said still holds true tho

2019-05-15 00:45:19 UTC  

Light moves differently through an atmosphere than empty space

2019-05-15 00:45:33 UTC  

so u have the sun the earth then the moon in a straight line but atmospheric refraction makes the sun move 90 degrees at least which is thoussnds of miles it sounds magical

2019-05-15 00:45:34 UTC  

Like my water example I used earlier

2019-05-15 00:45:44 UTC  

jeremy, please read the article

2019-05-15 00:46:00 UTC  

ive heard all the magical globe excuses