Message from @mineyful
Discord ID: 600887496049557521
I just need more time
kinda hard to compete against people who've studied for longer than you've been alive
I'll get to it within the next few months
Going forward don't try to read into or redefine the language I used to fit your argument. Thanks friend.
:thumbs:
wait what
👍
got it
!rank
<:XMARK6:403540169992568833> **IS_EARTH_FLAT?**, this command is disabled in this channel
Oof
aren't all those pictures with divergent rays altered pictures
they don't look like it was taken by a cellphone
and that cardboard divergent illustration
the beams look *way* too bright with the hand being still illuminated
or have to go through a fog
to see the beams better which I'm going to assume here
what you're describing are crepuscular waves
here's an example
are you sure that isn't just the tide moving in
idk how long that timelapse is
another image of the rays
as seen from above ^
Shining through openings in clouds (particularly stratocumulus[citation needed]) or between other objects such as mountains, these columns of sunlit scattering particles are separated by darker shadowed volumes. Despite converging toward the light source, the rays are essentially parallel shafts of sunlit and shadowed particles. Their apparent convergence in the sky is a visual illusion from linear perspective. This illusion is the same as railway lines' or long hallways' appearing to converge at a distant vanishing point.
here's an explanation
i can get sources if you need them
here's one source: http://ww2010.atmos.uiuc.edu/(Gh)/guides/mtr/opt/air/crp.rxml
Nasty NASA source: https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/images/76261/crepuscular-rays-india
also I find it hard to believe that a sun 0.04% the size of the earth can light up half of it
going with the 32 miles number you cited