Message from @IXI
Discord ID: 681371917655212135
now
answer my question
how does seasons work on a flat earth
So wait I still don’t get what the focal length has to do with anything
Drewski explains it better than I can
Should I @ him?
now he’s dodging my question
andbdjsncbc
Nah don’t disturb him
You haven’t explained it black
oops
> When the Moon is high, the clouds it is against are closer to the viewer and appear larger. When the Moon is low in the sky, the same clouds are further away and appear smaller, giving the illusion of a larger Moon.
@blacK
there
I don’t get it. So if the moon is high it’s larger and if it’s low it’s larger
?
no
when its high it *appears*
can u answer my question
Nope u still didn’t explain that
Anyways I’ll head to bed
please do
Enough chatting with glories for today
you aren’t the smartest
its been explained far too many times
at this point you have to be trolling
Clearly I’m not the smart one here. You act like your drunk and I had to explain the photo 20 times since You apparently forget what it’s about every 5 seconds
Then quote Kylie without understanding the non sense she said
That wasn't nonsense it was basic photography
Take a photography class if you don't understand
If it were basic photography it wouldn't be like that.
The moon being higher or lower doesn't have anything to do with it. Different camera lens focal lengths will give you *vastly* different images. Basically, the higher the focal length, the more the background is "flattened" together with the foreground. Take a look:
https://cdn-ep19.pressidium.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/focal-length-comparison.jpg
Oh i see
Japan's photo of the moon's surface would have a shallow focal length and capture more of the foreground, but the earth would appear distant. If the ship was very far away from the moon and zoomed in on it, you'd get a much, much larger earth.
I actually made a short vid to demonstrate, just a sec.
Okay makes sense now.