The sun cannot be large and just very far away. This is what I've been trying to tell you for several threads now.
And like many things you try to do, you do so with mutually contradictory arguments. You simultaneously try to argue that it being so large would make it take up the entire sky, while also claiming the distance means it will be a tiny point.
This shows just how ridiculous your claims are.
Try making a coherent argument.
And you continually just assert nonsense with no justification at all; like the above, which you have NOTHING to support.
Light and heat particles diminish and break down over distance?
No. They spread out, or are absorbed/scattered.
In space, the main effect is spreading out.
This follows an inverse square law.
However, black bodies follow a T^4 law.
Spreading out is not breaking down.
then we can see for ourselves that the sun's temperature at its core and surface should be subtract or divided by the number of miles away Earth is from the sun. Let's subtract the hottest portion of the sun by how many miles away it is (we don't even need to divide!) and we get 27 million degrees minus 93 million miles.
And doing so you end up with an entirely meaningless number.
This is because you yet again ignore units.
Lets try your dishonest, delusional BS, but with different units.
27 million degrees minus 1 AU.
That gives us 26 999 999 BS units.
This shows your claim is pure garbage just like normal.
We can even try it with your BS sun. How hot is it? Well given its colour and what we know about black bodies, it would need to be 6000 K. The standard idea for a FE is that it is 5000 km up.
That means when overhead it should be 1000 K or roughly 727 C, incredibly hot.
But near sun set it should drop to below 0.
Why not try doing it honestly?
Even doing it roughly honestly, the radius of the sun is ~700 000 km. The distance from the sun to Earth is roughly 150 000 000 km. That means the distance to Earth is roughly 200 times the distance from the core to the surface.
As it follows an inverse square law, and temperature follows an T^4 law, this results in a roughly inverse sqrt relationship. And the sqrt of 200 is roughly 14.
As the SURFACE of the sun is roughly 6000 K, that means the average temperature of Earth should be roughly 430 K. Quite different to your claim.
However, as the Earth is also emitting that energy when not facing the sun, that cuts the temperature by another factor of sqrt(2) ~1.4.
That cuts it down to roughly 306 K.
That is roughly 33 C, or 91 BS units.
You know, I don't think we'd feel it this far away?
What I know is that you are spouting pure BS, which makes no sense.
You are happy to do this because you are looking for whaterever excuse you can to dismiss it.
More importantly, at this distance, it would be well above any curves. For roughly half the day, it should appear as though a very distant star is directly above us due to angle.
Why?
Yet again you just spout delusional BS with no justification at all.
That is like saying the sun should appear as a tiny point, directly in the centre of your vision, regardless of which way you look.
It makes no sense at all.
As it is far away, it will subtend an angle of roughly 0.5 degrees.
It will appear directly overhead the sub-solar point.
To those away from the subsolar point, it will appear to drop with an angle of elevation of 90 degrees minus the angular separation to the subsolar point.
This is a Morton's Fork. Regardless of whether you answer yes or no, the answer to this fantasy of yours is no.
No, the answer to your fantasy is no.
Because none of that BS of yours was based upon reality at all.
Instead, you yet again spout delusional nonsense with no justification at all, to pretend the RE model is wrong.
Btw, the theoretical heat of this sun being so much greater at the core than on the surface disproves this theory, which is literally impossible due to actual laws of thermodynamics.
You sure love spouting delusional BS don't you?
Just what "actual laws of thermodynamics" does it break?
The fact that the heat is generated at the core means the core MUST be hotter. It is just a question of how much hotter.
Instead, the sun's heat scatters and breaks down over distance. This, not curvature, is why the sun appears to set.
And more dishonest BS.
If that was the case, the sun would slowly fade and appear to shrink until it vanishes while still high in the sky.
And the ability to see the sun would be based entirely upon distance to it.
Instead, we observe the sun appear to set, as if it is going below Earth, with Earth blocking the view.
In a manner entirely inconsistent with distance on a FE, as the further south you go during the southern summer the longer you can see it for. When if it was based upon distance with a north pole centred FE, it should appear for less time the further south you go, at least for locations south of the tropics.
Likewise, there would be no way for roughly the entire world to have roughly 12 hours of daylight on the equinox.
In a model where the sun is distant and light and heat continue indefinitely, seasons shouldn't exist because a big ball blankets the Earth in light, just before incinerating it. And if the sun was that distant, and light and heat do not continue indefinitely, then we should instead freeze to death.
Wrong again.
As above, we would not freeze to death.
And the difference in temperature comes from a difference in angle.
During winter, light is spread over a larger area than in summer.
The sun is alot closer and smaller than those giving the RE narrative say it is.
All the evidence shows otherwise.
Stop just asserting delusional BS.
If you can't come up with any problem with the RE model, try being honest for once and admitting that.
Lying like you are, with such clearly BS claims, just shows how dishonest and desperate you are.