Flat Vs Round Earth Activity
Flat Vs Round Earth Activity
Flat Vs Round Earth Activity
A simplified animation of the day/night cycle in FET over the course of 24 hours. Note that, in
actuality, the lunar cycle is slightly slower than the solar cycle
The lunar rotation cycle is about 347.81°/day
Day and night cycles are easily explained on a flat earth. The sun moves in circles around the
North Pole. When it is over your head, it's day. When it's not, it's night. The light of the sun is
confined to a limited area and its light acts like a spotlight upon the earth. The picture below
illustrates how the sun moves and also how seasons work on a flat earth. The apparent effect of
the sun rising and setting is usually explained as a perspective effect.
When the sun is further away from the North Pole, it's winter in the northern hemiplane (or
hemisphere) and summer in the south. A more simplistic picture can be found below.
7. How is there a magnetic field? Magnets can't be unipolar
While it's true that unipolar magnets can't exist, this isn't a problem for the Flat Earth. This is
because ring magnets, which are shaped like (you guessed it!) a flat disk, are capable of having
radial magnetization. In a radial magnet, one magnetic pole is at the center and other is at all
points on the edge of the magnet. A magnet like this can be found in loudspeakers, and
perfectly replicates what is found on the Earth.
8. As a passenger on an aircraft, how is it I can see the curvature of the earth?
Quite simply you cannot. It is widely stated you would need to be at a height of at least 40,000 ft
to get even a hint of curvature if earth were round. Commercial aircraft are not allowed to fly this
high. They are only allowed to fly just under this altitude. 36,000ft might be typical. In addition,
the windows on commercial aircraft are small and heavily curved. Even if they flew high enough
for a person to see curvature, it would still not be visible to passengers.
9. How is weather created in FET?
Many weather patterns are actually created by the land itself. For example - rain shadow. Rain
shadow is where somewhere on the eastern side of a mountain range (because weather/clouds
travel from the west generally) is deprived of rain not just once, but nearly all the time. This is
because the clouds are forced upwards by the mountains blocking their path and become cooler
and condense, meaning water droplets form and it rains on/before the mountains thereby not
raining on the leeward side.
Other weather patterns are created by geographic position like the tropics being humid - they
are surrounded by water which is constantly warmed and evaporated.
Physics and Cosmology
The 2007 retrograde of Mars. Retrograde motion occurs from the fact that the planets are
revolving around the sun while the sun itself moves around the hub of the earth. This particular
path the planets take makes it appear as if several of them make a loop along their journeys
across the night sky.
Planets (from Ancient Greek ἀστὴρ πλανήτης [astēr planētēs, "wandering star"], or just
πλανήτης [planḗtēs, "wanderer"]) are orbiting astronomical objects. The Earth is not a planet by
definition, as it sits at the center of our solar system above which the planets and the Sun
revolve. The earths uniqueness, fundamental differences and centrality makes any comparison
to other nearby celestial bodies insufficient - Like comparing basketballs to the court on which
they bounce.
11. Why doesn't gravity pull the earth into a spherical shape?
The earth isn't pulled into a sphere because the force known as gravity exists in a greatly
diminished form compared to what is commonly taught. The earth is constantly accelerating up
at a rate of 32 feet per second squared (or 9.8 meters per second squared). This constant
acceleration causes what you think of as gravity. Imagine sitting in a car that never stops
speeding up. You will be forever pushed into your seat. The earth works much the same way. It
is constantly accelerating upwards being pushed by a universal accelerator (UA) known as dark
energy or aetheric wind.
There are also other theories of flat earth thought that maintain that the earth sits on an infinite
plane, with the sun moving overhead. Gravity works much like it does in a round-earth model,
and the earth will never form into a sphere because the plane is endless.
12. Objects cannot exceed the speed of light. Doesn't this mean that the Earth can't
accelerate forever?
Due to special relativity, this is not the case. At this point, many readers will question the validity
of any answer which uses advanced, intimidating-sounding physics terms to explain a position.
However, it is true. The relevant equation is v/c = tanh (at/c). One will find that in this equation,
tanh(at/c) can never exceed or equal 1. This means that velocity can never reach the speed of
light, regardless of how long one accelerates for and the rate of the acceleration.
Humans have known that Earth is round for more than 2,000 years! The ancient Greeks measured
shadows during summer solstice and also calculated Earth's circumference. They used positions of
stars and constellations to estimate distances on Earth. They could even see the planet's round
shadow on the moon during a lunar eclipse. (We still can see this during lunar eclipses.)
Today, scientists use geodesy, which is the science of measuring Earth's shape, gravity and
rotation. Geodesy provides accurate measurements that show Earth is round. With GPS and other
satellites, scientists can measure Earth's size and shape to within a centimeter. Pictures from space
also show Earth is round like the moon.
Even though our planet is a sphere, it is not a perfect sphere. Because of the force caused when
Earth rotates, the North and South Poles are slightly flat. Earth's rotation, wobbly motion and other
forces are making the planet change shape very slowly, but it is still round.
From June to August, the sun's rays hit the Northern Hemisphere more directly than the Southern
Hemisphere. The result is warm (summer) weather in the Northern Hemisphere and cold (winter)
weather in the Southern Hemisphere.
From December to February, the sun's rays hit the Northern Hemisphere less directly than the
Southern Hemisphere. The result is cold (winter) weather in the Northern Hemisphere and warm
(summer) weather in the Southern Hemisphere.
From September to November, the sun shines equally on both hemispheres. The result is fall in the
Northern Hemisphere and spring in the Southern Hemisphere.
The sun also shines equally on both hemispheres from March to May. The result is spring in the
Northern Hemisphere and fall in the Southern Hemisphere.