Rarely will you find a self-employed scientist.
how come when i look at the stars at night i can see them clearly.and the moon i can see the moon clearly.if i can see that far away why can i not see the ice ring.and i often do look out to the horizon but i have never seen a 150 ft ice wallMAYBE ITS SEETHROUGH
Time is never wasted when you're wasted all the time
tl;dr
Quote from: frybaby on March 31, 2007, 11:43:49 PMhow come when i look at the stars at night i can see them clearly.and the moon i can see the moon clearly.if i can see that far away why can i not see the ice ring.and i often do look out to the horizon but i have never seen a 150 ft ice wallMAYBE ITS SEETHROUGHOh ffs READ THE FAQ. Your answer is there.
I happen to like GG.
I never thought in my life I'd write the sentence "I thought they were caught in a bipolar geodesic?"
Quote from: EIRD on April 01, 2007, 06:48:25 AMQuote from: frybaby on March 31, 2007, 11:43:49 PMhow come when i look at the stars at night i can see them clearly.and the moon i can see the moon clearly.if i can see that far away why can i not see the ice ring.and i often do look out to the horizon but i have never seen a 150 ft ice wallMAYBE ITS SEETHROUGHOh ffs READ THE FAQ. Your answer is there. where. I just combed it, and all it says about telescopes is "when you look at other celestial bodies, even through a telescope, they look flat".
but they should reflect the light.
Do you realize how negligible 150 ft is at the distance you are from the Ice Wall? It's going to be less than one thousandth of a degree above an ideal horizon.
Exactly how nifty is this telescope?
Oh, I get it now: "I have a telescope and I qualify it as 'nifty enough to see whatever I want', thus proving there is no ice wall since I have not seen it." Great proof.