It's a waste of money and time. As NASA and BoB knows, satellites are only in range to take flat pictures of a very large earth. Do the math.
Thank you....
And by doing the Math, do you mean the... Himawari 8 math?
The weather satellite that Japan put into Geosynchronous, and takes transmits full hemisphere photos of the Earth... Every 10 minutes, which they provide to the public and you can see.... *below*... and that you can look through to entire archive of pictures....
https://himawari8.nict.go.jp/
Have a look see.... I know it is easy to say... Photoshop... but... Every 10 minutes, a team of Photoshop wizards are rendering these photos in complete secrecy to perpetuate the Round Earth Myth...
..................................................... maybe................................................ But please.... show me the math of why it is absolutely not possible...
Himawari does not take single shoot pics.
Himawari runs a scan of a select portion of Earth.
And then a different select portion, and so on.
Those scans are then stitched together.
You and Himawari can go GFY.
But What I would like to focus on, while me and this satellite, "GF" ourselves..... Is that Himawari 8 is doing whatever it does, however it does it... which you have described to us all...
while it is suspended in a geosynchronous orbit... (a satellite) ........ taking pictures of the Earth (which does not appear flat)... and stitching them together and transmitting them down every 10 minutes
Oh, and please... how do you know how it works again?
- Wikipedia
Instruments
The primary instrument aboard Himawari 8, the Advanced Himawari Imager (AHI), is a 16 channel multispectral imager to capture visible light and infrared images of the Asia-Pacific region.[6] The instrument was designed and built by Exelis Geospatial Systems (now Harris Space & Intelligence Systems) and has similar spectral and spatial characteristics to the Advanced Baseline Imager (ABI) planned for use in the American GOES-R satellites. The AHI can produce images with a resolution down to 500m and can provide full disk observations every 10 mins and image the whole Japan territory every 2.5 minutes.[6] The Australian Bureau of Meteorology CEO Dr Rob Vertessy stated that Himawari 8 "generates about 50 times more data than the previous satellite".[7]
Data recorded from the Japanese Himawari 8 will be made freely available for use by meteorological agencies in other countries.[7]
From what I can gather, it takes pictures of the earth in different wave lengths, or using different filters, puts them together and transmits. Doesn't say anything about scanning different portions of the globe at different times... could you please cite your information?
Cheers mate