Message from @0ct0plasm
Discord ID: 678341069514997799
@Σ5 yes it does, did you forget fogs are thing? this happens under water and on mountain ridges where you can see it progressively getting less visible
The Solar System is traveling at an average speed of 230 km/s (828,000 km/h) or 143 mi/s (514,000 mph) within its trajectory around the galactic center
all that and not an ounce of motion you feel of it
Yes it's crazy but we can't just trust our senses
Where is sut right
when you're in a bus and it's driving along a highway you can get up and walk around comfortably
same goes for planes
even though they're moving pretty fast you don't feel the motion
cuz you're moving along with them
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just thought of something
if you wanna test the fog theory
you could go nearish a mountain and look where it should be
even if its obscured by fog it should still block out stars behind it
unless it somehow also becomes transparent
@0ct0plasm allegedly on your model, during the perihelion where the earth is closest to the sun the speed also changes and accelerates so we should feel some kind of motion. also fogs doesn't eliminate light it just blocks vision
@He Cute
1: the earth only accelerates relative to the sun as it falls closer and wraps around. when you're in freefall inside a plane you don't feel any acceleration, you just float, despite your acceleration towards the earth.
2: of course they don't block light, that's why distant stars can be seen on the horizon. the test would be to see if a mountain, a physical object in the way, would block out the light from those stars, or if instead the mountain is below the horizon and can't block that light.
@0ct0plasm 1. do you have any evidence for relativity?
2. if the fog is strong enough it could be able to obscure stars on the horizon but not always, fogs can sometimes even obscure the sun right on top of us so i don't see it not being able to also being able to do the same with stars on the horizon. weather conditions impacts how strong of a fog there is and we shouldn't assume it's the same always like you're proposing
look next to the mountain
see if you can see stars there
@Tyler \\タイラー rope bending because of fisheye lens 😂 good one!
where there's nothing obscuring it
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also i didn't mention relativity, i just meant that objects moving relative to another object can still move parallel to one another
there are several factors that plays into this like light pollution, altitude you're on, angle which you're looking on, weather conditions
so?
maybe you see no stars either way
that's still a result
@0ct0plasm do you have an example of an image or evidence of someone standing on a mountain and looking at 90 degrees to the horizon with a visible fog that obstructs the furthest ridges of a mountain and also blocks the stars?
why would i have an image like that on hand
Hello there
hiya
i was just proposing an experiment
Aloha
you made the claim that the star swould not be obstructed so you're basing your claims off what?
ok
i didnt claim anything
i proposed a method by which you could test which claim is correct