Message from @Flat Earth PhD
Discord ID: 668423036990390274
Post 1 of 2
How angular resolution works:
https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/379214321907007488/459818062858682368/65116694_resized550bbc_sg_g4_eye.png
The further an object (i.e. boat, building mountain) gets away from the lens, the angular separation will continue to close until the light blurs together and eventually becomes a line or point or edge"
https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/379214321907007488/468546464780386306/Airy_disk_spacing_near_Rayleigh_criterion.png
"As he looks downward toward his feet the slant approaches zero, as he looks upward the slant increases, as the center of clear vision approaches the horizon the slant becomes maximal, and at the horizon itself the land ceases to be a surface and becomes an edge"
https://zdoc.site/gibson-1952-the-perceived-slant-of-visual-surfaces-citeseerx.html
https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/458196098767388674/461973747197411339/Screenshot_20180628-121601_Drive.jpg
As you look down the right side of the hallway, you'll see the angular separation of light begins to close the further you look. Then looking at the left side of the hallway you'll notice the angular separation of light does not close or blur as quickly as the right side.
https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/379214321907007488/468578739572441119/look-down-the-hallway.jpg
Post 2 of 2
Here are some questions you can ask yourself. Where is the plane of the eye? What is the relative angle between the surface of target and the plane of the eye? Given that angle , what is the angular separation of the points of light on that target?
https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/419246750260264960/470518575698935808/unknown-65.png
Notice the blue cones angle compared to the orange cone. The blue cones angle will lose the light first on the bottom and the ground will start to blur with the object but if you raise in height the resolution will increase shown with the orange cone because the angle of light hitting the retina or camera is made larger. Once the angle becomes too shallow the light turns into a line or Edge. Think of buildings or boats or mountains not as objects but as quadrillions of points of light or photons coming to your retina at different angles and some will become non-resolvable before others. The ones closest to you disappear first as you back away. You will see the ground running up to the horizon then see the horizon as a line and will see things like the sky still or if there's a mountain or building you will still see the top parts but eventually those will also become unresolvable as they get further away and the angle changes.
what was them ancient people smoking
@He Cute DMT
Watchers taught them
I personally don't buy that Earth is flat, but I think NASA may be deceiving us to distract us from the real technology we have orbiting Earth.
They watch us
That's DARPA.
And no, they aren't watching you specifically, but they can see you.
hey guys
is the earth flat?
it has to be
water = level
Earth's surface = 70+% water
Earth's surface = level
Water follows an equipotential surface
Unless you dig a canal and then it does
water is always level, regardless of the container
canal, lake, plastic tubing, ocean.....doesn't matter
what about drops of water
Believe it or not, when water finds its level, it does not form a straight line. Because the Earth is curved, and gravity pulls in objects from all directions, water will be affected by these, and since water can’t be perfectly level unless all sides of it are being equally affected by gravity, bodies of water will always have a curve to them. Based on the area that the water takes up, that curve may be indistinguishable from a straight line (a glass of level water is considered straight, but the oceans are not).
Now, some of the skeptics may be saying “gosh, well what about the oceans? They are curved, but they can’t be level because they are always making waves, which means that there is an unequal pull on them as a whole! ” Well, you’re not wrong…
If the sun and moon didn’t exist. Because the moon is so close to the Earth, and the sun is so massive, they have slight gravitational affection to the Earth’s tides, causing waves, and an unequal distance from the top of the high waves, and the top of the lower waves, from the center of Earth’s gravitational pull. Take out these two forces (and any others from other planets), and the tides would be perfectly still, meaning they would be level.
So really, you can’t actually ask this question and get any reasonable answer. Water’s level is dependent on the shape of Earth’s gravitational field,
yep and..