The celestial bodies are described as projections upon the atmolayer in Earth Not a Globe. Distant lights will often magnify and maintain their sizes, as in the case of these distant street lamps:
https://vimeo.com/342791916The lamps in the far field appear to be the same size into the distance as they recede.
It is sometimes asserted that the above effects are caused by glare. This assertion invokes an apparent absurdity, however: to explain the observation of consistent sizes an enlarging glare would need to seemingly intellegintly adjust itself in size, in accordance to the shrinking with perspective and distance to the observer, in order to make the bodies the same size into the distance.
If glare at position A is making bodies x2 its size, for example, a body 8x smaller at 8 times distance from position A would be required to have a glare of 16x to match the glare at position A, which is eight fold increase of the initial ratio. It is questionable how 'glare' could know where the observer is, in order to cause bodies to maintain their exact sizes into the distance.