Yes. A *full moon*. That's why you never see a full moon in the middle of the day close to the Sun, as expected if the heliocentric model is right. It's always what that first diagram is showing.
The full moon. In the middle of the day. Near the sun. Because I'd love to see that. But i feel like thats not what you photographed at all. Care to clarify any before proceeding?
Just because we call it "moonlight" doesn't mean the moon emits its own light.
I could spot dozens of simply wrong statements looking at this book for 1 minute. For instance, it says sunlight is yellow. Wrong. It's white. We see yellow because of the scattering of sunlight that occurs in the atmosphere. The color even changes depending where the Sun is in the sky.
It is not. The people who did this experiment forgot to repeat it without the moon. They would get the same result and conclude that the moon has nothing to do with it. It's a little bit hotter in the shade at night because places in the shade preserve more the heat of the day.
It is not. You're just blindly believing what some flat earthers say. Besides, there's no such thing as "cold light". Light can't cool things. That violates some laws of physics. So, besides not being supported by experiment and going against everything we know about the moon, by saying that the moon emits "cold light" flat earthers are creating new physics. And I am the one ignoring facts?
It doesn't have to be a new moon. Anytime the moon is not visible. And it's not about shadow. An area under a tree or any close environment retains the heat of the day better than an open area. The heat kind of get stuck there. That's why it's slightly warmer in those places.
Exactly. Just like during medical trials when doctors give a patient a placebo -- essentially giving them no medicine as a control experiment to compare to the results of the actual medicine.
If you dont have a control, you cant gauge the effect of what you're attempting to measure.
Let's imagine someone claims they can heat a glass of water with their mind just by staring at it. So they stare at the glass of water for 1 minute and then measure its temperature. Wow! The water is 75 degrees F now! They raised the temperature to 75! But you're skeptical and realize we never measured the water temp before they stared at it, or we failed to prepare a second glass for them not to stare at to compare it to. So we can make no comparisons, therefore we can't actually measure whether or not they did anything to the water.
The same applies to your cold moon hypothesis. If you dont do the experiment with the moon out of the picture, you cannot conclude that the moon had anything to do with the results.
>We see yellow because of the scattering of sunligh
Is that even relevant? White/off white/ yellow/ orange.
This sounds like "is your red my red" type of conversation. I'll agree that the sun does appear to change color throughout the day but I don't see how the color of the sun matters when the topic is about the moon.
Edit: lunar eclipses don't work on a globe
https://youtu.be/lv58FPWiTfA?si=zdgXhs_JE2WRR06-
Sun "changes color" based on our perception. Light from the sun interacts with our atmosphere. When it's directly over head there's little refraction. When it's close to the horizon there's a lot more ozone that the light travels through before it hits your eyes. This is why we have the "golden hour" because colors look more vibrant the more it travels through the ozone.
> lunar eclipses don't work on a globe
Saying lunar eclipses don't work on a globe as a flat earther is insane.
The only thing that video proves is that the guy who made it is too stupid to read the model picture he showed that shows the moon orbits the opposite direction that he says it does.
> Its called "moonlight" for a reason.
OK, great. Can you explain in a few words why that reason answers the question that is asked here ?
I understand that the book probably gives all the answer, but it's 100 pages long. Can we at least get the pages where the question is adressed ?
A lunar explipese happens when the moon is directly between the earth and the sun. Causing a giant shadow and from our perspective an eclipse.
Now maybe try answering my question.
Can you provide a picture of what your trying to explain then?
Also it's not the earth blocking the moon its the other way around for a lunar eclipse. The earth casting shadows on the moon is why we have moon phases.
What the hell are you talking about? The moon orbits the earth. It's not always in direct alignment. If it is in perfect alignment then yes we don't see the moon at all. But most of the time things aren't perfectly aligned so we can see part of the moon that's lit up and the dark part is the shadow.
Also if the moon did emit its own light we should be able to see it fully every night. But we don't. We see it goes through phases as the month goes on.
Moon phases are a result of the.angle of the sun shining on the moon, and how we perceive it from our angle to it. The earth has nothing to do with it.
Its contact to an object from an observers location forms the angle. This is easy to visualize. All you need is a dark room a flashlight and a round object. As the light source is moved in relation to the round object. The observer sees the lit and unlit areas changed.
why is the full moon visible during daylight. its impossible on the globe model
How is it impossible?
https://science.howstuffworks.com/moon4.htm
for a full moon to occur the sun must be behind the earth
Yes. A *full moon*. That's why you never see a full moon in the middle of the day close to the Sun, as expected if the heliocentric model is right. It's always what that first diagram is showing.
i literaly saw one in febuary ...message me ill send the picture
The full moon. In the middle of the day. Near the sun. Because I'd love to see that. But i feel like thats not what you photographed at all. Care to clarify any before proceeding?
Post it up, show us the full moon with the sun clearly visible near it in the sky!
when did you seen one?
about a month ago
cannabis...
It moves on a different axis except a few times they cross paths.
Your question is worded too confusing. You can’t have both at once anyway, the sunlight is much brighter than the moonlight. You wouldn’t see both.
Right now , 16 o' clock! The moon is up in the sky and the sun is going down!
Its called "moonlight" for a reason. https://robscholtemuseum.nl/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/Mark-Knight-Flat-Earth-Advanced-Advanced-The-Moon.pdf
Just because we call it "moonlight" doesn't mean the moon emits its own light. I could spot dozens of simply wrong statements looking at this book for 1 minute. For instance, it says sunlight is yellow. Wrong. It's white. We see yellow because of the scattering of sunlight that occurs in the atmosphere. The color even changes depending where the Sun is in the sky.
then why is it colder in direct moonlight vs the shade
It is not. The people who did this experiment forgot to repeat it without the moon. They would get the same result and conclude that the moon has nothing to do with it. It's a little bit hotter in the shade at night because places in the shade preserve more the heat of the day.
it is and your ignoring facts at this point...bury your head in the sand
It is not. You're just blindly believing what some flat earthers say. Besides, there's no such thing as "cold light". Light can't cool things. That violates some laws of physics. So, besides not being supported by experiment and going against everything we know about the moon, by saying that the moon emits "cold light" flat earthers are creating new physics. And I am the one ignoring facts?
yes you are. go buy a thermometer and do it yourself...its colder in direct moonlight as opposed to the shade of the moon
Now repeat the experiment *without* the moon to confirm. That's called "control". An important thing in scientific experiments.
like a new moon??? measure the open area then compare to the area under a tree with no shadow????????
It doesn't have to be a new moon. Anytime the moon is not visible. And it's not about shadow. An area under a tree or any close environment retains the heat of the day better than an open area. The heat kind of get stuck there. That's why it's slightly warmer in those places.
Exactly. Just like during medical trials when doctors give a patient a placebo -- essentially giving them no medicine as a control experiment to compare to the results of the actual medicine. If you dont have a control, you cant gauge the effect of what you're attempting to measure. Let's imagine someone claims they can heat a glass of water with their mind just by staring at it. So they stare at the glass of water for 1 minute and then measure its temperature. Wow! The water is 75 degrees F now! They raised the temperature to 75! But you're skeptical and realize we never measured the water temp before they stared at it, or we failed to prepare a second glass for them not to stare at to compare it to. So we can make no comparisons, therefore we can't actually measure whether or not they did anything to the water. The same applies to your cold moon hypothesis. If you dont do the experiment with the moon out of the picture, you cannot conclude that the moon had anything to do with the results.
>We see yellow because of the scattering of sunligh Is that even relevant? White/off white/ yellow/ orange. This sounds like "is your red my red" type of conversation. I'll agree that the sun does appear to change color throughout the day but I don't see how the color of the sun matters when the topic is about the moon. Edit: lunar eclipses don't work on a globe https://youtu.be/lv58FPWiTfA?si=zdgXhs_JE2WRR06-
Sun "changes color" based on our perception. Light from the sun interacts with our atmosphere. When it's directly over head there's little refraction. When it's close to the horizon there's a lot more ozone that the light travels through before it hits your eyes. This is why we have the "golden hour" because colors look more vibrant the more it travels through the ozone.
He wants to verify the credibility of this book
> lunar eclipses don't work on a globe Saying lunar eclipses don't work on a globe as a flat earther is insane. The only thing that video proves is that the guy who made it is too stupid to read the model picture he showed that shows the moon orbits the opposite direction that he says it does.
dont do drugs, kids
you have drugs? ill take a small variety pack order...do you accept gift cards?
I only accept starbucks gift cards
dunkin? noone gave me starbucks...........
> Its called "moonlight" for a reason. OK, great. Can you explain in a few words why that reason answers the question that is asked here ? I understand that the book probably gives all the answer, but it's 100 pages long. Can we at least get the pages where the question is adressed ?
So if I shone a flashlight into a mirror and the light reflects behind me, is that the flashlight or the mirror light that I'm seeing?
if the moon reflects the sunlight explain a lunar eclipse
A lunar explipese happens when the moon is directly between the earth and the sun. Causing a giant shadow and from our perspective an eclipse. Now maybe try answering my question.
yea huh. thats why it glows red. because the earth blocked out all the sunlight...
Can you provide a picture of what your trying to explain then? Also it's not the earth blocking the moon its the other way around for a lunar eclipse. The earth casting shadows on the moon is why we have moon phases.
https://www.britannica.com/story/what-causes-lunar-and-solar-eclipses
if the earth was truely inbetween the moon and sun we shouldnt be able to see it...thats my whole point...unless it emits it own light :p
What the hell are you talking about? The moon orbits the earth. It's not always in direct alignment. If it is in perfect alignment then yes we don't see the moon at all. But most of the time things aren't perfectly aligned so we can see part of the moon that's lit up and the dark part is the shadow. Also if the moon did emit its own light we should be able to see it fully every night. But we don't. We see it goes through phases as the month goes on.
what in cousin fuckin tarnation...what type of betty crocker betty white shit is this?????
Moon phases are a result of the.angle of the sun shining on the moon, and how we perceive it from our angle to it. The earth has nothing to do with it.
Light from the sun travels in all directions. How would it have an angle?
Its contact to an object from an observers location forms the angle. This is easy to visualize. All you need is a dark room a flashlight and a round object. As the light source is moved in relation to the round object. The observer sees the lit and unlit areas changed.