Message from @BobRoss
Discord ID: 597664046367637504
@BobRoss you were asking about stars ^
We've been over that those are all user errors with the camera
If you used a normal telescope you get near crystal clear planets
Be my guest to look again with a real telescope
A camera isn't meant to zoom that far, especially the p900
Rather, there are ways to film stars with the p900 but non of the photos here show that you guys have done it correctly
No idea dude
p900 is like the panacea for observations
for them
firmament
forgot what the term they used
was it luminaries
if were going to keep going were going to need to establish whether or not this debate requries facts or not. either is viable, but they are tough to do at the same time. can we pick one please?
we're going off of fact
we know that the lens is wrong on the photos
only SOME of us are
we have to pick one
and it seems which ones obvoius here to me
aye he changed the subject
aw yeah
As the person gets smaller in comparison with the sphere underneath, the angle gets bigger, approaching but never really reaching 180 degrees. The bigger the sphere (planet), the bigger the angle. If it were to be 180 degrees you would be at the very center of the circle. What does the center of a circle see of the circle? No curvature at all, it sees a straight line. You will never be at the exact center, but for all visual purposes you might as well be.
That's a real nice read
when globe earthers accuse you of using cartoons
you'd have to be in the exact middle and be at the very top against the dome
they are inside the dome from what we can tell, so we don't know for sure
some parts of the moon appear to be transparent or translucent
what you see as shadows can simply be darkness, as we see the moon looking blue-ish during day time when it is out
not shadows, see through.
so all darkness=shadows?
it is
go outside and take a thermometer.
put it in the moonshade