The Flat Earth Society

Flat Earth Discussion Boards => Flat Earth Q&A => Topic started by: johnsmithdoelol on May 11, 2017, 09:29:20 AM

Title: If the earth is flat
Post by: johnsmithdoelol on May 11, 2017, 09:29:20 AM
does the sun follow the "equator" all the way accross earth?
Does the moon follow the same path?
How do clouds seem like they are moving with the wind, while satellites move in different directions at different paces?
Title: Re: If the earth is flat
Post by: robintex on May 11, 2017, 09:36:41 AM
does the sun follow the "equator" all the way accross earth?
Does the moon follow the same path?
How do clouds seem like they are moving with the wind, while satellites move in different directions at different paces?
Where is the horizon ?
Title: Re: If the earth is flat
Post by: johnsmithdoelol on May 11, 2017, 09:39:02 AM
Im just asking where the sun/moon are and how clouds/satellites work
Title: Re: If the earth is flat
Post by: wise on May 11, 2017, 03:00:04 PM
does the sun follow the "equator" all the way accross earth?
Does the moon follow the same path?
How do clouds seem like they are moving with the wind, while satellites move in different directions at different paces?

You should to clouds are moving frenzied if the earth is a spinning ball.

F= mv^2/R

So; the objects in the outside of the atmospher should rotate slower than the objects in ground level. So there is a difference of the speed for different altitude levels. So you should see everything in the air is moving from west to the east. But in a open day you look to the air and sometimes nothing, completely nothing is moving.

The earth is stationary. Completely stationary, no doubt.
Title: Re: If the earth is flat
Post by: disputeone on May 12, 2017, 06:29:32 PM
does the sun follow the "equator" all the way accross earth?
Does the moon follow the same path?
How do clouds seem like they are moving with the wind, while satellites move in different directions at different paces?

You should to clouds are moving frenzied if the earth is a spinning ball.

F= mv^2/R

So; the objects in the outside of the atmospher should rotate slower than the objects in ground level. So there is a difference of the speed for different altitude levels. So you should see everything in the air is moving from west to the east. But in a open day you look to the air and sometimes nothing, completely nothing is moving.

The earth is stationary. Completely stationary, no doubt.

(https://s14.postimg.org/z5fjjlaoh/19060057dc47764109b3c1f88477cde1-1.jpg)