It is my understanding on the globe
If you want to see Polaris you have to be no further south than 2 degrees below the equator.
Any more than that (Australia for example) you can't see Polaris.
How does this work on a flat earth?
2 degrees? Good... That means Flat Earth stuff, related to distance issue. While "shifting 2 degrees southwards", your horizontal view is supposed to get upwards. (?) But no, even you don't have to dip your face to see polaris. the horizon ain't block your sight to see it. Because the earth is not a globe.
I have another problem.
If the earth was flat, would we have a horizon as we see it on the earth* ? (The globe, that is *)
If there is a horizon on a flat earth, how far would it appear to be from the observer as we see it on the earth ? *
If there is a horizon on a flat earth, would the height of the observer affect how far away it appears to be ? *
The horizon is defined as the line where sky and land (or sea) appear to meet because of the curvature of the earth *
Since there is no curvature on a flat earth, explain how this would be if the earth was flat ?
A little explanation of this "spotlight sun" would also be helpful.
Could it be a disc , too ?
If only the bottom was lighted, it would shine only downward , and then only in a circular shape ?
Or is there some kind of a something like a cylindrical lampshade with some kind of a lens to make the sun shine only downward in a
circle ?
In that case, wouldn't you see just the beam of light get smaller and fade away instead of the whole sun ?
Historical note on previous post, thanks to some research by a person on another website.:
The star Aldebaran could have possibly been seen from the decks of the Titanic on the nights of the 11th or the 12th of April , 1912 .
But possibly not on the nights of the 13th or (the 14th, the night of the sinking.)