MossRoad
Super Moderator
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2001
- Messages
- 58,061
- Location
- South Bend, Indiana (near)
- Tractor
- Power Trac PT425 2001 Model Year
Yeah, I've heard that one a few times. Nice!
https://twitter.com/neiltyson/status/431554750119550976?lang=enYou need a better airplane...
I'll take this guy's word for it...
![]()
He Flew the SR-71
A former Blackbird pilot now volunteers at the National Air and Space Museum.airandspace.si.edu
"You’re at 85,000 feet. You see the curvature of the Earth—the beautiful blue. Black sky above you. You can see up to 350 miles in any direction. It’s a magnificent sight. And at night—think of the pictures you’ve seen from NASA or the Hubble—90 percent of the stars we could see up there, we can’t see on Earth because the atmosphere is filtering them out."
A common reply from people who are ingrained into cults. You too can break out of it!I have pity for those so ignorant they refuse to learn anything....truly stupid people are not worth caring about...!
Your pity is certainly misplaced. The feeling is definitely mutual.Geeze you feel bad for his family.![]()
Your link doesn't work.https://twitter.com/neiltyson/status/431554750119550976?lang=en
Neil: "Wide angle lenses curve horizontal lines. So no Earth curvature for Felix at 3x an airplane’s altitude". C'mon Neil! Felix was at 128,000 ft.![]()
Your pity is certainly misplaced. The feeling is definitely mutual.
Trust me was you go Flat you don't go back.![]()
he is saying you see it but “if the earth was round you wouldn’t see it”I would like to challenge the stated idea that you cannot see the Chicago skyline from Lake Michigan. It is simply not true. The lake is directly adjacent to the city, you can see it. What nuounce am I missing in this claim? What is this supposed 60 miles mentioned in Trad's post?