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Flat Earth General / Re: Sun is neither a firing nor a spinning ball !
« on: August 03, 2019, 11:50:35 AM »
interesting post. nice pics. I'd have to give your pics more thought before I can conclude anything.
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no, but I am guessing you can guess it by using the approximate distance of the sun and knowing the time zonesSo you are suggesting the sun is stationary and Earth spins once every 24 hours?
yesYes maybe, but the earth is so large id bet it's hard to observeIt would actually be the other way around with a small Earth making it hard to observe. For a large Earth it becomes easier.
That is because the acceleration (and thus force) is equal to omega^2*r, where omega is the angular velocity in radians per seconds.
Fortunately the 24 hour rotation is quite slow and would result in a fairly small apparent acceleration of ~0.1 m/s^2.
This would be enough to skew the apparent direction of gravity by 0.6 degrees.
This would require your "flat" Earth to be ever so slightly parabolic or the water would all be at the edge.I think it's both! The wind plus cold temps cause ice.Again, if it was wind we should feel it.So no answer?QuoteThe big issue with that is what gives it direction?popMaybe it's the Centrifical force caused by the earth rotating around the center of our galaxy and facing it! Like the Graviton at an amusement parkThen this is no longer just density.
There is also the question of what is causing Earth to move like that.
popI think the earth is flat, wobbly, and spinning beneath a small disc shaped sun.Do you have any indication of how fast it is spinning?
no, but I am guessing you can guess it by using the approximate distance of the sun and knowing the time zones
If it is still flat, you should be able to observe a sideways force from the spinning.
Yes maybe, but the earth is so large id bet it's hard to observeI think the edges of the world are frozen because of the wind chill caused by a rotating earth.If this was the case then that means the air isn't rotating with Earth. We should feel that as wind.
A better idea is that the sun heats it up and away from the sun it freezes.
I think it's both! The wind plus cold temps cause ice.I assume gravity is densityThe big issue with that is what gives it direction?