What would shadows - and the view - be like from inside a dome? SEE DESCRIPTION

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  • čas přidán 14. 03. 2024
  • Correction to dialogue: The plate was 4.5 feet higher than the dome. It did not start out directly over the dome. The farthest point it moved to was horizontally 9 feet away from the dome.
    Dome-shadow-and-from-inside.mp4
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Komentáře • 4

  • @flo-plus
    @flo-plus Před 4 měsíci +1

    Nice demonstration!

  • @liftingtheveil8361
    @liftingtheveil8361 Před 2 měsíci

    The sun and moon circle within the firmament dome not outside of it?
    They are like curved lenses that face downwards as they circle above earth.
    The sun has a diagonal clockwise tilt each day as can be seen be taking a single photo of sun spots each 24 hours
    I observed this over two days at 11.27am.
    A sun spot on the left went up, a sun spot on the right went down and spots in the middle tilted diagonally from the previous day.

    • @fromjesse
      @fromjesse  Před 2 měsíci +1

      The reason the sun needs to be outside of the dome is because Jeran was trying to explain how the sunlight retrfacting through the dome would cause it to appear to set even though it was always high in the sky.
      If the sun was inside the dome then it would never appear to set. You need some special optic lensing that is between us and the sun for it to appear where it is not.
      As to sunspots, I'm pretty sure what you're describing is exactly what we'd see if earth was a globe.

    • @liftingtheveil8361
      @liftingtheveil8361 Před 2 měsíci

      @@fromjesse I would not listen to certain deflectors stating nonsense.
      The sun sets because things get lower in the sky the further they go away from your line of sight.
      No one can explain sun spots only going around the face of the sun 90 degrees and not changing anymore for over 4 hours afterwards.