KC Scott wrote:3,459 mi Distance from New York, NY to London
6,056 km (3763 miles) Distance from Rio de Janeiro - State of Rio de Janeiro to Cape Town
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KC Scott wrote:3,459 mi Distance from New York, NY to London
6,056 km (3763 miles) Distance from Rio de Janeiro - State of Rio de Janeiro to Cape Town
Ask Scott.Dinsdale wrote:Can one get a guide to take them across any continent, much less the one with no food and water?
Bongs for breakfast?Smackie wrote:Basically, what you see in the photo of the Toronto skyline is exactly what one would expect to see, and should see, on a sphere the size of the Earth.
I tried this explanation a few miles back, smackie. You are wasting your breaf....errrr keystrokes.Smackie Chan wrote:'tart - I'm here to help, so let me see if I can clear things up for you. You are fond of using the Toronto skyline shot from 31 miles away as evidence that the earth isn't curved. The circumference of the Earth is 24,901 miles. Dividing the circumference by 31 results in 803.26. Let's round it to 800. That means the distance from the camera to the skyline is 1/800th of the Earth's circumference, or .45 degrees, meaning a circle 31 miles in circumference on the earth's surface curves .45 degrees from its center to the edge of the circle, which is imperceptible. Essentially, to the naked eye, it is flat; what you'd see within and at the edge of that circle is what you'd see if the Earth were flat; there would be no appreciable curvature beyond the horizon behind which tall buildings would disappear. The clip 88 posted with the Scot doing the math stated that the Earth's curvature can't be seen until one gets about 10 miles above the Earth, at which point the curvature is about 4 degrees, so at roughly 1/9th of that curvature, all will appear quite flat.
Let's look at it another way. Order the largest round pizza you can buy. If you cut that pizza into 8 equal slices, the curvature at the crust end of each slice will be 45 degrees, and you'll see each slice has a pointy end and a curved end. Now cut the pizza into 800 slices. Each sliver will now be so thin that it will appear to have two pointy ends; the curvature of the crust end will be negligible and imperceptible since it will now be .45 degrees rather than 45 degrees. If you separate the slices then put them back together the same way they were after cutting it, you'll end up with the round pizza you started with. But if you put it back together in such a way that the crust (curved) end of every other slice is inward instead of outward, what you'll end up with is a square, and you'll detect no noticeable curvature of each component (sliver) of the square. Each edge of the square will look perfectly straight, even if you were to enlarge the pizza from its original size to one with a circumference of 31 miles.
Basically, what you see in the photo of the Toronto skyline is exactly what one would expect to see, and should see, on a sphere the size of the Earth.
Light coming on yet?
Glad I could help.
mvscal wrote:The only precious metals in a SHTF scenario are lead and brass.
If by "infatuated" you mean "horrified", well, yes.Papa Willie wrote:Goobs infatuated with me? Commonplace.Goober McTuber wrote:Mammy and shutyomouth made a baby? The horror.
Joe in PB wrote: Yeah I'm the dumbass
schmick, speaking about Larry Nassar's pubescent and prepubescent victims wrote: They couldn't even kick that doctors ass
Seems they rather just lay there, get fucked and play victim
I actually provided mathematic fact, but let's forget that for now and get to your question, and more...poptart wrote:You have denied mathematic fact
I won't imagine anything; I'll simply do the math, which shows that the top of an 1800' tower will be obscured by the horizon at a distance of 52.23 miles. From 31 miles away, the lower 634.25' of the tower will be obscured, meaning the top 2/3 of it will still be visible. This was computed using your boy Greg London's formula and correcting his error - a mile is 5,280', not 5,028'. Using the Pythagorean Theorem, the results are computed from ground level rather than eye level. Using the Earth curve calculator and plugging in an eye height of 5.75' (I'm 6' tall, so that's a fair approximation for me), the lower 525.2' of the building would be obscured from 31 miles away, and the top of the tower would be obscured by the horizon at a distance of 54.89 miles.assuming you had no obstruction at all between you and the CN Tower, how many miles do you imagine you would have to move away from the tower before it disappeared completely under the horizon?
Screw_Michigan wrote: ↑Fri Apr 05, 2019 4:39 pmUnlike you tards, I actually have functioning tastebuds and a refined pallet.
Well, that certainly places a curious slant on things.R-Jack wrote:All I'm saying is that if I married a Korean, I'd doubt anything on earth is round as well......
Felix wrote:you've become very bitter since you became jewish......
Kierland drop-kicking Wolftard wrote: Aren’t you part of the silent generation?
Why don’t you just STFU.
BSmack wrote:Best. AP take. Ever.
Seriously. I don't disagree with a word of it.
Yes, thank you.Smackie wrote:I won't imagine anything; I'll simply do the math, which shows that the top of an 1800' tower will be obscured by the horizon at a distance of 52.23 miles. From 31 miles away, the lower 634.25' of the tower will be obscured, meaning the top 2/3 of it will still be visible. This was computed using your boy Greg London's formula and correcting his error - a mile is 5,280', not 5,028'. Using the Pythagorean Theorem, the results are computed from ground level rather than eye level. Using the Earth curve calculator and plugging in an eye height of 5.75' (I'm 6' tall, so that's a fair approximation for me), the lower 525.2' of the building would be obscured from 31 miles away, and the top of the tower would be obscured by the horizon at a distance of 54.89 miles.
Obviously filmed with a wide angle lens.88 wrote:
JPGettysburg wrote: ↑Fri Jul 19, 2024 8:57 pm In prison, full moon nights have a kind of brutal sodomy that can't fully be described with mere words.
You know nothing.Carson wrote:Obviously filmed with a wide angle lens.88 wrote:
No, it doesn't.88 wrote:Of particular note, that list includes CN Tower, which stands 1,814' height. The math tells us that 1,349' of it should be visible to Wire Boy's camera. And that certainly appears to be the case from his video
I consider Genesis 1 to be vitally important, AP.AP wrote:ALSO what the shape of the Earth is when it serves no purpose in God's teachings.
You tried what?smackaholic wrote:I tried this explanation a few miles back, smackie. You are wasting your breaf....errrr keystrokes.Smackie Chan wrote:'tart - I'm here to help, so let me see if I can clear things up for you. You are fond of using the Toronto skyline shot from 31 miles away as evidence that the earth isn't curved. The circumference of the Earth is 24,901 miles. Dividing the circumference by 31 results in 803.26. Let's round it to 800. That means the distance from the camera to the skyline is 1/800th of the Earth's circumference, or .45 degrees, meaning a circle 31 miles in circumference on the earth's surface curves .45 degrees from its center to the edge of the circle, which is imperceptible. Essentially, to the naked eye, it is flat; what you'd see within and at the edge of that circle is what you'd see if the Earth were flat; there would be no appreciable curvature beyond the horizon behind which tall buildings would disappear. The clip 88 posted with the Scot doing the math stated that the Earth's curvature can't be seen until one gets about 10 miles above the Earth, at which point the curvature is about 4 degrees, so at roughly 1/9th of that curvature, all will appear quite flat.
Let's look at it another way. Order the largest round pizza you can buy. If you cut that pizza into 8 equal slices, the curvature at the crust end of each slice will be 45 degrees, and you'll see each slice has a pointy end and a curved end. Now cut the pizza into 800 slices. Each sliver will now be so thin that it will appear to have two pointy ends; the curvature of the crust end will be negligible and imperceptible since it will now be .45 degrees rather than 45 degrees. If you separate the slices then put them back together the same way they were after cutting it, you'll end up with the round pizza you started with. But if you put it back together in such a way that the crust (curved) end of every other slice is inward instead of outward, what you'll end up with is a square, and you'll detect no noticeable curvature of each component (sliver) of the square. Each edge of the square will look perfectly straight, even if you were to enlarge the pizza from its original size to one with a circumference of 31 miles.
Basically, what you see in the photo of the Toronto skyline is exactly what one would expect to see, and should see, on a sphere the size of the Earth.
Light coming on yet?
Glad I could help.
Did you provide truth?Smackie wrote:I actually provided mathematic fact
88 wrote:Of particular note, that list includes CN Tower, which stands 1,814' height. The math tells us that 1,349' of it should be visible to Wire Boy's camera.
And that certainly appears to be the case from his video:
while viewing this...Smackie wrote:the lower 525.2' of the building would be obscured from 31 miles away
Yeah, eyeballing can be a bit deceiving, so I did some measuring and computing. Admittedly, there may be some flaws in in my methodology and precision, but given what I have to work with, here goes...poptart wrote:you think that's what we see.
Rogers Centre is 282 ft.
The observatory starts at 1,100 ft.
Look at wire boy's pic again.
Well, let's see by taking what 88 points out the math says and comparing it to my measurements and computations. The ratio of what the math says should be obscured by the horizon to the total height of the tower is 465/1814 (.256), or 25.6%. I'd say 27% is pretty close to 25.6%.addressing 88, you wrote:465 ft need to be hidden below the horizon, you say.
Felix wrote:you've become very bitter since you became jewish......
Kierland drop-kicking Wolftard wrote: Aren’t you part of the silent generation?
Why don’t you just STFU.
"Don't forget the sun-screen. Not much shade in hell, you sinner."Papa Willie wrote:...flat-assed...
Felix wrote:you've become very bitter since you became jewish......
Kierland drop-kicking Wolftard wrote: Aren’t you part of the silent generation?
Why don’t you just STFU.
'Zactly.KC Scott wrote:
9/27/22“Left Seater” wrote:So charges are around the corner?
Screw_Michigan wrote: ↑Fri Apr 05, 2019 4:39 pmUnlike you tards, I actually have functioning tastebuds and a refined pallet.
Genesis 1 says the Earth is flat?poptart wrote:I consider Genesis 1 to be vitally important, AP.AP wrote:ALSO what the shape of the Earth is when it serves no purpose in God's teachings.
Suit yourself.
BSmack wrote:Best. AP take. Ever.
Seriously. I don't disagree with a word of it.
BSmack wrote:Best. AP take. Ever.
Seriously. I don't disagree with a word of it.
I've never said any such thing.Roach wrote:But wait . . . I thought you said the old testament is not important. Or is it just the parts god says are important. Or the parts you think god thinks is important.
Jayne wrote:Smackie has given a veritable lesson in mathematics to poptard and he shifts gears midstream to go from the terms "fact" to "truth".
On what Scriptural basis should I do this?Atomic Punk wrote:BTW, pops... when you think of the old term firmament, think of the term "matter" that was without shape or form.
The same one in Genesis 1 that says the Earth is flat. You're not very good at logic are you?poptart wrote:On what Scriptural basis should I do this?Atomic Punk wrote:BTW, pops... when you think of the old term firmament, think of the term "matter" that was without shape or form.
BSmack wrote:Best. AP take. Ever.
Seriously. I don't disagree with a word of it.
I'm not going to waste time on this debate with you, AP.Atomic Punk wrote:The same one in Genesis 1 that says the Earth is flat. You're not very good at logic are you?poptart wrote:On what Scriptural basis should I do this?Atomic Punk wrote:BTW, pops... when you think of the old term firmament, think of the term "matter" that was without shape or form.
Is "matter" firm and having substance or not?poptart wrote:I'm not going to waste time on this debate with you, AP.
It's already been done.
I've thoroughly detailed (with Scriptural basis) how the Bible tells us the firmament is a solid structure.
If you think otherwise, think away.
I don't care.
BSmack wrote:Best. AP take. Ever.
Seriously. I don't disagree with a word of it.