Debunking Flat Earthers 8 inches/mile squared - Irrelevant formula that both sides get wrong

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  • Опубликовано: 7 июл 2024
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    #globe #science #flatearth #8inches
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Комментарии • 2,9 тыс.

  • @DaveMcKeegan
    @DaveMcKeegan  11 месяцев назад +48

    Sign up for a 14-day free trial and enjoy all the amazing features MyHeritage has to offer. If you decide to continue your subscription, you’ll get a 50% discount: bit.ly/DaveMcKeegancore

    • @SaneGuyFr
      @SaneGuyFr 11 месяцев назад +1

      Good debunk! Those flatards will not understand.

    • @UncleKennysPlace
      @UncleKennysPlace 11 месяцев назад +2

      Did you do the DNA as well on MH?

    • @DaveMcKeegan
      @DaveMcKeegan  11 месяцев назад +2

      @@UncleKennysPlace I've sent it off but awaiting the results
      Although my partner used their DNA facility a year or so ago and found some relatives in America

    • @DarrellLarose
      @DarrellLarose 11 месяцев назад +2

      Win the top prize on a major lottery, you'll find all the relatives you never knew or had!

    • @luboinchina3013
      @luboinchina3013 11 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@DaveMcKeeganMistake at 9:08 Water vapor is actually lighter than air, that is why it rises up. Water has two Hydrogen atoms and one Oxygen. Oxygen has two oxygens and Nitrogen two nitrogens both heavier than water vapor

  • @ConnerSpeed6
    @ConnerSpeed6 11 месяцев назад +451

    My favorite part of these videos is watching Dave's doggo grab his hand every time he pulls his hand away! XD

    • @mr.commonsense
      @mr.commonsense 11 месяцев назад +8

      Same

    • @0cgw
      @0cgw 11 месяцев назад +29

      I've always thought that Rusty is the real star of the videos.

    • @edenstonne
      @edenstonne 11 месяцев назад +5

      Fr he's so adorable ❤

    • @The_Ragequit_Cannon
      @The_Ragequit_Cannon 11 месяцев назад +14

      It's like he's saying "I didn't tell you to stop". I've seen a similar video of this little monkey who kept grabbing a woman's hand and putting it back on its head when she'd stop petting him

    • @luckymapache
      @luckymapache 11 месяцев назад +14

      ​@@0cgwwhat do you think we are here for? 😆🐶

  • @James_Randis_Spirit
    @James_Randis_Spirit 11 месяцев назад +210

    I love how flat earthers think a floating ball in space is craaaaaazy, but a flat disc surrounded by an ice wall, guarded by the evil government and inside a giant upside down salad bowl sounds completely reasonable.

    • @larrywest42
      @larrywest42 11 месяцев назад +5

      Not just "the government" but *every* government, military, space agency, airline, shipping company, aircraft manufacturer, surveyor, weather agency, and on and on - including their ex-employees - for _at least_ the past several centuries.
      Conservatives, liberals, socialists, Communists, devoutly religious people and atheists, scrupulously honest people and con-men, quiet truth-seekers and blatant attention-seekers...
      Somehow, every person who holds any position of responsibility is captured by this conspiracy.
      Makes Scientology look like a clique of preschoolers.

    • @user-oq7xc5qp3y
      @user-oq7xc5qp3y 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@larrywest42 for *at least* the whole history of mankind.
      Some of flerfs are going way before 5000 BC.

    • @ernie5229
      @ernie5229 11 месяцев назад

      As usual, the "ballers" have it all wrong AGAIN. The flat disc surrounded by an ice wall, inside a giant upside-down salad bowl isn't guarded by THE government. It's guarded by ALL the governments on the planet. And has been for all of time. (And, no, don't ask me how the disc got here.) This was the case even when there was no means of communication between the governments (which was 99.9% of that time). Wait, when you say it like that, it really does sound crazy, doesn't it?

    • @ReValveiT_01
      @ReValveiT_01 11 месяцев назад +37

      Just the fact that they think humans can keep secrets is ridiculous enough.

    • @capitalcorner443
      @capitalcorner443 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@ReValveiT_01 It would be hilarious to see the CEO of NASA stuttering and swearing when asked for proof if the earth is round(I'm not a flat earther)

  • @Sgt_SealCluber
    @Sgt_SealCluber 11 месяцев назад +124

    It's like 1 meter = 3 feet rule. It works well enough for rough calculation of small measurements, but not for longer measurements and it's meant to simply be an easy and quick way to convert meters to feet to understand size or distance.

    • @dgthe3
      @dgthe3 11 месяцев назад +3

      This has nothing to do with your point but ... who ever does 1m=3ft? Its barely more difficult to do 1m=3.3ft. Just add another 10% if you're going from meters to feet, or subtract 10% if going feet to meters. You'll be accurate to within about half a percent. Rounding will probably cause a bigger error.

    • @Well...Darn.
      @Well...Darn. 11 месяцев назад +15

      @@dgthe3 I can't speak for everybody, but I've found the "3ft = 1m" is used more for a simple comparison rather than for measuring. "What's 100 meters?" "About the length of a (US) football field." While 100 meters is quite a few feet longer, you can convey the idea to somebody easily.
      (edit to fix the glaring error as outlined in replies below)

    • @Sgt_SealCluber
      @Sgt_SealCluber 11 месяцев назад +6

      @@dgthe3 To be more specific it's "a meter = a yard" but a yard is 3 feet, so same thing and we better understand small measurements in feet.
      It's meant to just get a rough idea, for example if something is 50m long I can quickly go "over 150ft" or using yards it's "over half a football field", both of which are far more useful to me than 50m. Now when we are dealing with 10s (10, 100, 1000 etc) then I would use 3.3, or heck even 3.28, since it's just moving the decimal and adding zeros.
      It's for quick, doesn't matter much, in your head math.

    • @NZBigfoot
      @NZBigfoot 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@dgthe3 Im from a metric country and have always used metrics... but I often use the 3ft to a meter when doing something that doesn't require accuracy... sure over 10meters you've suddenly lost a meter but hey, when measuring a few meters for something in the garden or telling someone something in terms of 'it was this big', 20-30cms isnt gonna matter much (3x a foot thats 30cms, the size of a school ruler, is easier to visualize and approximate with your hands than a meter i find).

    • @cr10001
      @cr10001 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@Well...Darn. I have NO IDEA how long a football field is. Nor an Olympic swimming pool. Why can't commentators just use comprehensible units like feet, yards or metres?
      As a rough Imperial to Metric equivalent, 3 metres = 10 feet is probably better and quite close to accurate.

  • @edenstonne
    @edenstonne 11 месяцев назад +409

    Honestly, the fact that Dave video feels more like a simple fact explanation than a rage debunking makes it 100 times more enjoyable for everyone.
    Keep going !
    (And flat earther, for God sake, please go sailing.)

    • @kimchristiansrensen5531
      @kimchristiansrensen5531 11 месяцев назад +5

      Cannot agree more.

    • @stue2298
      @stue2298 11 месяцев назад +5

      I agree every time I watch a debunking vid and have to listen to flat earther, I get annoyed.

    • @steevo101
      @steevo101 11 месяцев назад +20

      Absolutely... if the point is to help borderline flateathers and/or help flat-earthers see better... Dave's presentation is so much less arrogant, angry debunking, which nearly always produces the backfire effect. As one who looked deep into the anecdotal evidence of a flat earth (finding it compelling), the clean, calm, and clear presentations of real experiment and objective observations, is so much better at keeping a mind on the facts rather than the emotion. Which is so unlike Prf Dave who's snark and arrogance is a real turn off for people needing facts, experiment, and objectivism. Just be cordial, clear, and respectful and you will be able to deliver truth to those who need it.

    • @truthbebold4009
      @truthbebold4009 11 месяцев назад +4

      He would actually make a great professor. I'd call him "Dave the legit professor"
      Edit: if he became a professor, then I would call him "Dave the legit professor". I didn't think it would be necessary to clarify that 🤷‍♂️😄

    • @TheDarkSide11891
      @TheDarkSide11891 11 месяцев назад +18

      @@steevo101The only credit I’ll give Professor Dave is that a lot of his annoyance and frustration is directed at those who have directly attacked him or frankly are scummy enough to deserve it. If you look at some of his earliest Flat Earth content that are simply just informational debunks, they are a lot more tame.

  • @Jegekim
    @Jegekim 11 месяцев назад +276

    Excellent video as always. No insults, no yelling, just cold hard facts, science, and logical reasoning. You're at this point the best debunker I've seen, keep up the good work!

    • @mikepictor
      @mikepictor 11 месяцев назад +21

      This is exactly why I watch this channel. No bombastic insults, no degrading, no hyperbole. Just facts, clearly expressed, in a gentle tone, while giving a very good dog some love. He isn't insulting flat earthers, just explaining how their conclusions are inconsistent.

    • @rogeriopenna9014
      @rogeriopenna9014 11 месяцев назад

      I much prefer Professor Dave awesome debunkings exactly because he is not afraid to tell Flattards what they are: retards who slander scientists and engineers and everyone else.
      M Keegan is nice but not my favorite. He respects too much the flattards

    • @Zoogleas
      @Zoogleas 11 месяцев назад +13

      @@mikepictor Very true. However, I will say that the majority of flat Earthers aren't likely to be swayed by facts given their absurd adherence to pseudoscience and faulty argumentation, so the lack of insults probably won't do much to help them realise their errors. Great video though as always.

    • @lucasdrudi7231
      @lucasdrudi7231 11 месяцев назад +12

      ​@@ZoogleasI agree that they won't easily be convinced that the earth isn't flat, but if they were insulted for that it would be even more unlikely for them to realise that.

    • @ferrarisarecool7
      @ferrarisarecool7 11 месяцев назад +4

      I would have to agree. As much as I enjoy scimandan I think dave edges him for me, for the reason stated by the OP.

  • @meyes1098
    @meyes1098 3 месяца назад +5

    You only need to ask a flerfer "why is the mile squared?" to see that they have no idea what that formula means.

  • @Mike-zm7tr
    @Mike-zm7tr 11 месяцев назад +102

    Noticed one mistake. Humid air is less dense, not more dense. Higher the humidity, lower the density. So the least dense air would be hot and humid. Cheers

    • @DaveMcKeegan
      @DaveMcKeegan  11 месяцев назад +36

      Thanks Mike 👍

    • @notgonnahappen7899
      @notgonnahappen7899 11 месяцев назад +19

      Correct. It's literally how clouds and rain work. If moist air was more dense, rain clouds would be at ground level.

    • @lloydevans2900
      @lloydevans2900 11 месяцев назад

      @@notgonnahappen7899Except that you do sometimes get clouds at ground level - that's what fog is, a cloud which has fallen down to the ground. This is related to the classic question of "how do clouds stay up in the air", or "why don't clouds fall down to the ground", or similar: Clouds ARE constantly falling - it's usually thermal air currents which keep them up in the air, fog happens when those thermals dissipate and the cloud falls back to earth before it can evaporate. Which is why fog often happens in the early morning, after the daytime thermals have dissipated overnight, and the fog clears later in the day when enough energy is supplied by the sun to evaporate it, or the thermal air currents regenerate and lift the water vapour back up into the air.
      Density differences are of course a factor: Thermals take warm air (which is less dense) upwards and the moisture goes with them as humidity, since warmer air can hold more water vapour. Clouds form when that rising air cools down and can no longer hold the moisture as humidity, so water droplets condense out, forming a visible cloud. Which can often continue rising or at least not fall, depending on the strength of the thermal supporting it.

    • @TheScotty1701d
      @TheScotty1701d 11 месяцев назад +21

      Wow, I never thought about that and at first it confused me, but it absolutely makes sense:
      If one assumes, the air pressure is approximately equal inside and around the cloud, by ideal gas law (pV = nRT) the particle density is equal inside and outside.
      Since H2O is lighter than O2 or N2, the density of humid air is lower.
      Thanks for the the hint.

    • @WalterBislin
      @WalterBislin 11 месяцев назад +16

      Saturated moist air density at 15°C is 0.9936 times the density of dry air. Moist air is maximal 0.64% less dense than dry air at 15°C.
      But Note: not the absolute density creates atmospheric refraction, but the vertical density _gradient._ So if humidity is constant, it does not contribute to the density gradient and hence to refraction at all, only to the absolute density. The influence on the density gradient is in practice negligible.
      So refraction is practically the same for try and moist air, except humidity has a very strong gradient, which is limited because humidity can only vary between 0% and 100%. The stronger the humidity gradient, the smaller the layer it influences.

  • @randomized4368
    @randomized4368 2 месяца назад +3

    You're expecting flerfers to understand refraction when they can't even understand up and down.

  • @martingorbush2944
    @martingorbush2944 11 месяцев назад +67

    After Dave explained why simple Earth's curvature calculators are not so accurate with what we observe I was afraid that he won't mention Wolter Bislins work. That guy is a legend. Thanks to Dave it wasn't a case. ;)

    • @Requiem4aDr3Am
      @Requiem4aDr3Am 11 месяцев назад +5

      heh yeah that and his refraction simulator are great.

    • @gaetanoroccuzzo
      @gaetanoroccuzzo 11 месяцев назад +5

      Thanks Martin for introducing me to Walter Bislins calculator. I have always wanted to see graphically the relation between observer height and horizon distance. Thanks to you, now I got it. Thanks again.

    • @martingorbush2944
      @martingorbush2944 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@gaetanoroccuzzo You should thank Dave. But it was my pleasure to mention Walter Bislin. That guy is a godsend. :)

    • @do_notknow_much
      @do_notknow_much 11 месяцев назад +4

      Bislin's Earth Curve Calculator is great. Shows the difference between hidden and drop. Factors in refraction.
      ...A great many in depth articles on his sight as well. I especially enjoyed the detailed Rainy Lake Advanced Level Bedford Experiment.

  • @nickwysoczanskyj785
    @nickwysoczanskyj785 11 месяцев назад +58

    This is similar to the difference between the line of sight of a rifle scope, and the line of a rifle bore. The ballistic arc of a fired projectile appears to “rise up” through the line of sight, at the first point of aim, and then drop back to intersect the line of sight again at the second point of aim. In reality the projectile is dropping the second it leaves the barrel. The apparent “rise” is a product of the angular relationship, and the offset, between the scope and the bore.

    • @mikefochtman7164
      @mikefochtman7164 11 месяцев назад +6

      Hehehe... there is a video game series "Sniper Elite" that I've enjoyed. One of the neat physics features is that if I can figure out exactly where the 'bad guy' is and he's just below an intervening obstacle at some distance (say, 200m), I can shoot OVER the obstacle and hit them. The game correctly calculates the difference between scope sight and rifle bore, and the shallow arc the bullet travels over the obstacle, dropping down to hit the 'hidden' target. :)

    • @lucasdrudi7231
      @lucasdrudi7231 11 месяцев назад +2

      Oh so that's what happens with the arrows in Skyrim!

    • @nickwysoczanskyj785
      @nickwysoczanskyj785 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@mikefochtman7164 I know the series, and played it on the PlayStation 2. It’s one of the only games that models the external ballistics and sight picture relationship well. I particularly enjoyed it, because I grew up in the middle of nowhere, and shot regularly until my mid 20s. I used to hunt, periodically, mostly rabbits because my grandmother made an awesome rabbit stew, but that was using a point blank aim setup - where the trajectory is fairly flat, and the arc between the 1st and 2nd point of aim is contained within the kill zone. Which is only about an inch for rabbits. But what I really enjoyed was long range target shooting for fun. I used to nerd over ballistics calculators, making shooting tables (of minute of angle corrections), range finding and scope set up. I live in a much more built up area, these days. I kinda miss not having anywhere suitable to shoot.

    • @nickwysoczanskyj785
      @nickwysoczanskyj785 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@lucasdrudi7231 Yeah, the basic concept of the relationship between line of sight, and a ballistic trajectory, holds true with any form of shooting. Ironically, I also did archery regularly from age 11-16, bare-bow with a recurve, and a light 45lb compound bow with sights. But yeah, the principle is basically the same.

    • @irishkorean3479
      @irishkorean3479 11 месяцев назад +3

      This doesn't make complete sense though. If you're firing at a significant distance (200 yards or more) then you have to tilt the gun upwards slightly. This is extremely obvious using iron sights. As such the bullet isn't always dropping the moment it leaves the barrel, there is a period where it will be moving upwards slightly before it starts dropping. The only time this wouldn't happen is if the gun is completely level with the ground, or obviously pointing downwards.

  • @wiggles7976
    @wiggles7976 11 месяцев назад +17

    This flat earther in the beginning says "with 8 inches per mile squared, the curve would most certainly be visible, but it's not." Then when you show flat earthers the Lake Pontchartrain pylons photo taken by Soundly, they say "I'm seeing too much curve." How do we simultaneously see not enough curve *and* too much curve?

    • @Isolder74
      @Isolder74 11 месяцев назад +3

      Well in this case too much is the fact you can see it at all. They live trying to make everything black and white and use things like the approximations intended to be close enough before the days of computers when everything had to be done by hand.

    • @JavaBum
      @JavaBum 11 месяцев назад +1

      Simple: stupidity.

    • @Tsudico
      @Tsudico 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@Isolder74 They also love to parrot that it isn't the "geometric horizon" so that makes it invalid. They like to ignore the fact they can't calculate to the "geometric horizon" on a flat earth because they don't even have a model of a flat earth.

    • @Isolder74
      @Isolder74 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@Tsudico They never both to say why that matters just playing word games so they can just ignore anything they don’t wish to address.

  • @sthurston2
    @sthurston2 11 месяцев назад +101

    8" x Miles squared is a rounded off version by Samuel Rowbotham based on an approximation given by the 1860's Encyclopedia Britannica in their article on Levelling. Samuel included it in his first small edition but left out the article in the larger later edition. The article included the entire mathematical derivation and is quite interesting. It also included a very explicit warning against the effects of refraction that Samuel completely ignored.

    • @0LoneTech
      @0LoneTech 11 месяцев назад +7

      This matches well with the [Wikipedia: Bedford level experiment] article on Rowbotham's canal experiment, but the encyclopedia sure gave me a merry chase!
      Levelling: See surveying.
      Surveying: See trigonometry.
      I believe the formula can be arrived at using a Taylor series for 1-cos(x), which produces roughly x²/2 (constant terms cancelled, every other term becomes 0, and further terms scale with an inverse factorial, so it converges - at least for x

    • @DaveB-hg7el
      @DaveB-hg7el 11 месяцев назад +3

      I thank both of you for the history lesson and the math.

    • @sthurston2
      @sthurston2 11 месяцев назад

      @@0LoneTech Why not check out the first edition of Zetetic Astronomy by Parallax. The preview available at Google Books has the quote starting on the 4th page of text after the contents list. The maths used in the quote is super basic. No Taylor series.

    • @tawhv
      @tawhv 11 месяцев назад

      I have derived the formula here
      byggvir.de/2023/08/01/curvature-of-the-earth-eight-inches-per-mile-squared/
      The approximation is good enough for eye levels below 10,000 m. The error is less than 2 % and less than 0.04% if you use 7.8481 cm / km squared.
      The refraction raduis in air is between 40.000 to 50.000 km. That is approximately 1 cm per km squarred. That adds an error < 15 %. In most flat earth evidence, this error can be neglected because if something is hidden, regardless of how much, the earth can't be flat. Flat earth mostly porve that something can be seen, but not how much is seen and how much is hidden.

    • @kevinfisher1345
      @kevinfisher1345 11 месяцев назад +4

      While yes it was used by Samuel, the roots of this old rough approximation is older than Samuel and had been around before him. Samuel did not invent it, he was just merely smart enough to likely understand that represents a parabola but used it as the con man he was. It is used by surveyors to do quick calculations as it works fairly well for short distance. Especially when talking about single digit miles like surveyors typically deal with in line of sight. And was used back in the days for approximations without doing complex maths.
      Any real calculation of Earth curvature _must_ include the radius as part of the calculation. There is no radius accounted for in 8" per mile squared.

  • @LordAnubis85
    @LordAnubis85 11 месяцев назад +21

    Most flat Earth RUclipsrs have dug themselves in so deep with their beliefs that they have no way of getting out without destroying their online reputation. It's because of this that I firmly believe that even if a flat Earther was gifted a seat on Blue Origin, they would never report about it or they would come up with some extravagant conspiracy that they were drugged and plugged into a computer simulation or something crazy like that.

    • @lyndafjellman3315
      @lyndafjellman3315 11 месяцев назад +3

      It would be fun to watch them "debunk" the entire video of them walking onto the ship and looking out the windows though

    • @5peciesunkn0wn
      @5peciesunkn0wn 11 месяцев назад

      @@lyndafjellman3315 Agreed.

    • @BreaDakrums
      @BreaDakrums 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@lyndafjellman3315They must have hacked my optical nerves! Those damn NASA lizard people reeeeeeeeeee!

    • @tysondog843
      @tysondog843 11 месяцев назад +3

      That's why I respect Ranty. He admitted he was wrong, and Owned it. That took guts and maturity.

    • @Tre-q9u
      @Tre-q9u 11 месяцев назад

      Technically we haven't it gives more fuel that yall have to guess with pseudoscience and theoretical physics

  • @chrispysaid
    @chrispysaid 11 месяцев назад +144

    Dave, you're a truly skilled science communicator. I'm glad you've chosen to do what you're doing.

    • @MegaDudeman21
      @MegaDudeman21 11 месяцев назад

      me too

    • @Tre-q9u
      @Tre-q9u 11 месяцев назад +1

      U mean pseudoscience

    • @chrispysaid
      @chrispysaid 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@Tre-q9u He's also very good at communicating pseudoscience, as in explaining the flat earth position, and then using real science to explain why it's all bunk. He's generally just good at communicating both sides, steel-manning his interlocutors and then clearly and thoroughly debunking the nonsense flat earthers espouse.

    • @asneakychicken322
      @asneakychicken322 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@Tre-q9uhe is quite good at clearly explaining the arguments of flat earthers and thus makes it easy to understand why they make no logical sense

    • @CryptoRoast_0
      @CryptoRoast_0 9 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@Tre-q9udo a video trying to debunk anything he says. But you won't, because you cant. At all.

  • @RossM3838
    @RossM3838 11 месяцев назад +4

    The flat earthers aren’t listening as they only listen to each other

  • @shegocrazy
    @shegocrazy 11 месяцев назад +13

    3:06 It amuses me how flat earthers look at that picture of Chicago (for example) and suggest that it's a proof of flat earth and yet ignore the ELEPHANT in the room that is the missing bottom half of the buildings. No matter how or what formula is used there is no way that image should be like that on a flat earth.

  • @Alan157
    @Alan157 11 месяцев назад +10

    Nathan Oakley 3 minutes after this video goes up be like : "Dave Refraction Mckeegan!"

    • @MarceldeJong
      @MarceldeJong 11 месяцев назад

      Nathan “things defract into the distance” Oakley wouldn’t know facts if it hit his child.

  • @christophercripps7639
    @christophercripps7639 11 месяцев назад +7

    Love how "water finds its own level" disproved "horizon rises to our eye level."

  • @khandimahn9687
    @khandimahn9687 11 месяцев назад +63

    I just love how the water level absolutely destroys the horizon is always level argument. I get that it can be hard for someone to imagine the scale of things, we spend all our lives close to the ground, but I don't get how they can ignore the tons of evidence.

    • @Zoogleas
      @Zoogleas 11 месяцев назад +15

      Cognitive dissonance and lack of education is my best guess. There's a very conspiratorial tinge to most flat Earthers though I do find. Has there ever been one flat Earther who didn't think the government/NASA was lying to them about the shape of the Earth? I've yet to find one! Not that NASA has even been the authority on what shape the Earth is, so even if they lied about all their missions, that still wouldn't debunk the shape of the Earth lol.

    • @mangojulie123
      @mangojulie123 11 месяцев назад +11

      I think you are mistaken here. The water level demonstration does NOT destroy the horizon is always level argument. It destroys the argument that the horizon always rises to eye level!

    • @jdmjesus6103
      @jdmjesus6103 11 месяцев назад +2

      It needs showing to every flat earther that says 'water finds its own level'.

    • @teebosaurusyou
      @teebosaurusyou 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@jdmjesus6103 Well yeah, it does find it's own level around the globe - sea level.

    • @shwingleman
      @shwingleman 11 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@teebosaurusyouwhich also happens to vary across the globe

  • @taqresu5865
    @taqresu5865 11 месяцев назад +14

    To add another point about atmospheric refraction, it can result in hot air and cold air mirages. Just as the plane appears reflected on a tarmac, so too can the sky appear reflected in the desert, giving the illusion that there is a source of water ahead.
    Cold weather mirages had a significant impact upon the tragedy of the Titanic as well. It was a moonless night surrounded by Icebergs. The refraction made the horizon appear higher than it was, hiding the iceberg until immediately before it struck the Titanic, it also made the Titanic appear like a completely different ship to the surrounding vessels, and when the Titanic's crew tried to used the Titanic's lights to send a distress signal, the cold air caused to to flicker like starlight, scrambling the messages.

  • @rinner2801
    @rinner2801 11 месяцев назад +4

    Most hilarious of all is that this is even still a debate.

    • @Alan-ez6ji
      @Alan-ez6ji 11 месяцев назад +3

      well, our globe has been mapped every millimeter...
      Yet flatards can't even agree of a map of their fairytale Frisbee, as none of the distances matches reality within hundreds of miles 😂

    • @Mark-Stone
      @Mark-Stone 11 месяцев назад

      It’s not really a debate though, is it. It’s sensible people trying to edu take drooling morons.

  • @EleanorPeterson
    @EleanorPeterson 11 месяцев назад +11

    The Earth must be flat because everyone on it can see Cori Celesti - er, I mean the Himalayas - from their back garden. Oh, no, hang on a minute...

    • @dogwalker666
      @dogwalker666 11 месяцев назад +1

      You Ankmorpork lot are always getting confused.

  • @benjaminwoodrowmusic6070
    @benjaminwoodrowmusic6070 4 месяца назад +2

    This always does my effing head in when i see them say the 8 inches thing, the fact that they cant even grasp the idea of the curve in the first place

  • @Hykje
    @Hykje 11 месяцев назад +39

    "Flat Earthers have a misconception of how _____write something -anything____ works."

    • @d614gakadoug9
      @d614gakadoug9 11 месяцев назад

      I only ran across the modern flat Earth stuff a few months ago, but I've followed blogs of a number of science communicators, mostly in matters related to biology such as evolution and medicine, for many years.
      When I "discovered" flat Earth I quickly came to realize that flerfs are very much like others who deny science and the knowledge we get therefrom. They are often remarkably arrogant and they are almost all quite profoundly ignorant of the basics of the topics whereof they speak. They'll assert that they are "critical thinkers." Fine, but you can't critically think your way through something about which you know almost nothing. Actually, and real critical thinker with limited knowledge would conclude that when they are arguing against a large body of evidence from a multitude of highly qualified scientists, it is the odd man out who is likely to be wrong. Of course sometimes the odd man out turns out eventually to be correct, but it is pretty darned rare these days in science.

    • @faikerdogan2802
      @faikerdogan2802 10 месяцев назад +1

      LMAOOOO I laughed loud at this

    • @RegebroRepairs
      @RegebroRepairs 10 месяцев назад +1

      They don't know how work works. Which is why they live off their mums and spend all day on flat earth discords.

    • @Thirdbase9
      @Thirdbase9 8 месяцев назад +4

      Spheres. Flat Earthers don't know how spheres work. They keep talking about the top and bottom.

    • @RegebroRepairs
      @RegebroRepairs 8 месяцев назад +3

      @@Thirdbase9 So many think north is up and south is down.

  • @The_Beer_Hunter
    @The_Beer_Hunter 11 месяцев назад +8

    I bet flat earthers really hate your videos. You're calm and precise. They don't know how to handle it. Well done again Dave.

    • @user-oq7xc5qp3y
      @user-oq7xc5qp3y 11 месяцев назад +1

      Look at the comments sorted by new.

    • @Tre-q9u
      @Tre-q9u 11 месяцев назад

      I don't i love debunking yall theoretical physics and pseudoscience along with millions of others

    • @The_Beer_Hunter
      @The_Beer_Hunter 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@Tre-q9u theoretical? Oh you mean the proven and reputable sources and evidence rather than the guy in his moms basement who thinks he’s proven the worlds smartest people wrong. Keep trying, keep failing and I’ll keep laughing

    • @Mandelbrot_Set
      @Mandelbrot_Set 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@Tre-q9u I see that you have a new script that you don't understand. "Theoretical Physics! *SQUAWK!* Theoretical physics!" You don't know any theoretical physics. You have never even touched a physics book. 🤦‍♀

    • @Tre-q9u
      @Tre-q9u 11 месяцев назад

      @@The_Beer_Hunter u mean yall playing the guessing games

  • @JustWasted3HoursHere
    @JustWasted3HoursHere 11 месяцев назад +8

    That city being visible from across the shore is funny because it only happens under specific conditions. If it was proof that the Earth is flat then it would be visible every day of the year, but it isn't.

    • @thearmouredpenguin7148
      @thearmouredpenguin7148 11 месяцев назад +4

      In fact it happens so infrequently that when it occurs it makes the news.

    • @Katy_Jones
      @Katy_Jones 11 месяцев назад +3

      The only reasonable explanation is that THEY dug a big hole to hide Chicago, but every now and then, freedom fighters manage to release enough hot air to make the buildings float up and give the game away.
      Nothing else fits /s

    • @elBartoDR
      @elBartoDR 11 месяцев назад +4

      Also, on a flat earth you would see the streets also, not just the highest buildings. With pictures like that they proof the world is a globe.

    • @JustWasted3HoursHere
      @JustWasted3HoursHere 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@thearmouredpenguin7148Correct. Didn't stop Rob Skiba (RIP) from using this as his argument that the Earth is flat. Funny thing is, and this is true of a lot of flat Earthers that I've seen, he seems overall like a fairly intelligent guy but his religious leanings have just turned that part of his brain off.

    • @simond.455
      @simond.455 11 месяцев назад +1

      Simplest explanation is that the Earth is flat, but only when nobody is checking.
      That's how it works, right? 😆

  • @wtf1185
    @wtf1185 11 месяцев назад +27

    I have a hard time understanding the laws of physics, you see, I never studied law.🐰 Thanks for the clear and concise explanations Dave, I really enjoy them.

    • @Alex-uu5sx
      @Alex-uu5sx 11 месяцев назад +1

      😂😂

    • @d614gakadoug9
      @d614gakadoug9 11 месяцев назад +3

      I hate the expression "laws of physics." The laws of physics are things like "don't leave radioactive materials laying around on benches", "turn off the lights if you're the last one out of the lab" and "grad students should have the same number of limbs and digits at graduation that they had when they started."
      The laws are the laws of nature as discovered and described by the science of physics.

    • @capitalcorner443
      @capitalcorner443 11 месяцев назад

      @@d614gakadoug9 I think it's called the rules of physics Class not the Laws of Physics because Rules of Physics Class make a lot more sense than seemingly breaking the Law if you don't follow them(Which luckily is impossible)

    • @lud3269
      @lud3269 11 месяцев назад

      @@d614gakadoug9 Lmao, I hope this was sarcastic

  • @stuartgray5877
    @stuartgray5877 11 месяцев назад +35

    The approximation "8 inches per mile squared" IS accurate out to about 750 miles.
    If you want the "HUMP HEIGHT" of the earth in between the two endpoints, you must use HALF the distance between the two endpoints.
    If you want "DROP FROM A TANGENT" then you use the full distance.
    The Flerfs don't know the difference, so they always calculate "Drop from a Tangent" when they really want "Hump Height".
    SO, it's no wonder they can never find the curve they are looking for because they are always looking FOR TOO MUCH!
    There is a video on my YT channel that explains the math in detail.

    • @JavaBum
      @JavaBum 11 месяцев назад +12

      I always thought that they couldn't see the curve because they can't see past their noses.

    • @5peciesunkn0wn
      @5peciesunkn0wn 11 месяцев назад +6

      @@JavaBum Can't see past their ears more like.

    • @d614gakadoug9
      @d614gakadoug9 11 месяцев назад +6

      As a hump height calculator it is useful for trying to explain to flerfs why Earth's curvature can usually be ignored in short-distance surveying, as in laying out the foundation for even fairly large buildings, or explaining why trying to measure the hump in the water in an Olympic-size swimming pool would be a daunting task.
      I've used it a few times as a check to make sure I've used an on-line circular arc/chord calculator correctly. I don't use such a thing much, so I don't have a good "feel" for what to expect and therefore like a check to make sure I haven't erred due to specifying the wrong unit or some other blunder. A lot of people don't seem to take a moment to ask themselves "does this calculated value look reasonable?" and wind up with something like being 9 orders of magnitude off because they confused "milli" with "mega."

    • @5peciesunkn0wn
      @5peciesunkn0wn 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@d614gakadoug9 "confused 'milli' with 'mega'." is the same thing as flerfers dumping water on a basket ball and asking why it doesn't stick to the surface of the ball lol.

    • @feedingravens
      @feedingravens 11 месяцев назад +6

      They don't want the hump, they want hidden height, but do not regard observer height. But that is easy to do (when you know math):
      You reverse the 8 inches formula, then you can determine the distance to the (geometrical) horizon for the observer height.
      I.e., Distance = sqrt(8"/height)

      In that distance your line of sight is tangential with the earth surface.

      Then you subtract the distance to the horizon from the distance to the object and then can use the 8 inches for that rest, getting the geometrical drop..

  • @Groffili
    @Groffili 11 месяцев назад +12

    Something I would love to see explained by the Flat Earthers: if the flat earth is the reason why Chicago skyline is visible in these images... why isn't it visible all the time? Or at least, most of the time, without heavy cloud cover or fog obstructing the view?
    I have asked Flerfs about this a number of times... but they all chose to ignore the question instead of making something up as usual.

    • @5peciesunkn0wn
      @5peciesunkn0wn 11 месяцев назад +2

      Always a fun way to pick apart their arguments. "Hurr durr this thing is visible!" Yes. It's visible in this instance, but if the Earth was flat, then it would be visible *all* the time instead of waiting for specific conditions to make that thing visible. So why do photographers have to wait for specific conditions to get the picture?

    • @Tabearnack
      @Tabearnack 11 месяцев назад

      Why would a flat earth negate atmospheric refraction? You making that shit up bro?

    • @davidfaraday7963
      @davidfaraday7963 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@Tabearnack A flat earth wouldn't negate refraction, but the density stratification would be horizontal, not curved, so the visual effects would be very different from what we see in reality.

    • @stanlee4217
      @stanlee4217 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@5peciesunkn0wnEver seen the fake horizon above the real horizon?. Maybe go outside and observe a sunset or sunrise over the ocean for a few days and you'll see..

    • @5peciesunkn0wn
      @5peciesunkn0wn 11 месяцев назад

      @@stanlee4217 I don't believe I've seen one yet. Sadly nowhere near the ocean. Would it work on the Great Lakes?

  • @Nuovoswiss
    @Nuovoswiss 11 месяцев назад +6

    One important detail about those photos of the Chicago skyline, and why refraction doesn't explain the observed shifts: they're taken from ~100 feet above water level, atop very large sand dunes that are common on the Lake Michigan coasts across from Chicago.

    • @1maico1
      @1maico1 10 месяцев назад +1

      Occasionally you can see looming of the French beaches from the high cliffs of Dover. Most of the time France is visible but only cliff tops. Diffraction makes a big difference. Head over to the Bislin advanced earth calculator and use the refraction slider to change levels.

  • @anthonycongiano8890
    @anthonycongiano8890 21 день назад +2

    I agree with all. The one major point that you missed is that no flat earther ever uses 8 inches per mile squared to measure curvature. They always use it to say, "you shouldn't see this building, tower, or mountain range" when once you calculate that the hill you're standing on is 500 feet above sea level and that tower is 200 feet high... you totally should see that tower.

  • @guyrose2847
    @guyrose2847 11 месяцев назад +24

    i am tempted to fall back to my simplistic answer: why does someone on a boat, at the top of a mast, spots land before the ones on decK? On a flat earth, everyone on the boat (with the same eyesight, of course) would spot land at the same time. There would be no need to put someone in the crow's nest, as mariners have been doing for thousands of years. Flerfers jus trigger me.

    • @stanlee4217
      @stanlee4217 11 месяцев назад

      Refraction? wonder why you are getting triggered? Cause MAYBE you've been lied to your whole life.. and you are falling for it...!

    • @joerichardson4325
      @joerichardson4325 10 месяцев назад

      Land Ho!

    • @rodneybaker2629
      @rodneybaker2629 Месяц назад +1

      The reason they try to get up s high as they can it to be able to look over the ocean waves. Of course you probably don't know how high waves can get if you've never been in the middle of the ocean.

    • @EPICSOUNDTRAX
      @EPICSOUNDTRAX Месяц назад +1

      Not always
      Ocean level is not constant
      Just to tell you that simple disturbance of the sea can give you a 15 meter difference
      A big disturbance like a big storm is more than 20,30 meters.
      And i mean not like in the movies
      Just a quiet and up and down elevator feeling.
      So no even if the earth was flat you cannot see farther than a few miles.
      Local fishermen use the view of the opposite city as a reference.
      If the city across the shore is visible the weather is good
      I mean they can see the shoreline
      If they cannot the water is too high the weather is bad.
      It has nothing to do with curvarure.

  • @Leviathan894
    @Leviathan894 10 месяцев назад +4

    It can not be stated enough that your explanations are thorough, clear, and straightforward. A person could not care at all about the “debate” (if it can even be called that) and still learn a lot. It’s also refreshing that a video about this isn’t just heavy handed with condescension insults. Refreshing to watch.

  • @ChaffyExpert
    @ChaffyExpert 11 месяцев назад +3

    Reasons for watching video:
    10% knowledge
    20% laughing at flat earthers.
    70% doggy

  • @Requiem4aDr3Am
    @Requiem4aDr3Am 11 месяцев назад +3

    uh oh you discussed math so now the flerfs won't comment here unless they didn't watch the video and try to recite their scripts

  • @thearmouredpenguin7148
    @thearmouredpenguin7148 11 месяцев назад +10

    8" per Mile^2 was a standard approximation used by surveyors and civil engineers, before the availability of computers, since at least the early 19thC. The earliest reference I have found is in "A Treatise on Surveying and Civil Engineering, Wherein Everything That is Useful and Curious is Demonstrated from its First Principles", by P.A O'Shaughnessy (p30). Published 1848 in New York.

    • @WalterBislin
      @WalterBislin 11 месяцев назад +4

      The formula gives a slightly too small approximation for short distances. It is most accurate at 400 km. Until 550 km or 342 mi the error stays within ∓0.032%. Until 800 km or 497 mi the error is less than 0.1%.

    • @martinconnelly1473
      @martinconnelly1473 11 месяцев назад +2

      Surveyors then and now used it for an approximation of the drop from the horizontal line of their theodolite, starting from the surveying point. It works well enough for typical surveying distances but was never supposed to be used for drop beyond the horizon.

  • @joshuafarlow-wolgast8082
    @joshuafarlow-wolgast8082 11 месяцев назад +12

    Great video. This is a topic that has been the bane of my existence. My brother does not believe refraction can cause as much as I would think based on the videos. But with every rebuttal, he points to another TikTok FE video, and ignores anything I say. I also just started researching this topic, and found another video that when through the math to show how this formula works, so it was good to see another person mention it as well.

    • @smiffsoft
      @smiffsoft 11 месяцев назад +4

      Be careful arguing with siblings who've fallen into the Flerf cult, my brother got so deep in the rabbit hole he eventually had to be sectioned. He's out now, but since he's started bringing up other conspiracies recently I speak to him less and less (his current favourite is mudflood). On the plus side, he never mentions flat earth now, but when he was sectioned the doctors explained how arguing with him about it would have made him worse and I kind of see their point. Sadly it means we rarely ever speak, as I don't want to contribute to another more lengthy stay in a care facility.

    • @paulcrumley9756
      @paulcrumley9756 11 месяцев назад +1

      Anyone who gets science from Tik-Tok. . .could probably turn lead into gold with all that "education."

    • @stephenolan5539
      @stephenolan5539 4 месяца назад

      ​@@smiffsoft
      One thing that I have noticed about conspiracy people is they never bring up the real stuff.
      There is the story of how Target knew a 15 year old girl was pregnant before her father did.
      In the county I grew up in there is a conservation authority that had a lot of power. It was not really part of the government but still the guy in charge could block construction in some places.
      And there are other real life examples of people and groups manipulating people but the conspiracy people never talk about them.
      I'm not sure if any of the people complaining about shrinkflation are conspiracy believers.

  • @jonathangirier-dufournier7501
    @jonathangirier-dufournier7501 11 месяцев назад +27

    The fact that you can maintain a straight face, while your dog demands pats and scratches, astonishes me. The way the dog puts its paw on your arm just cracks me up.

    • @zebo-the-fat
      @zebo-the-fat 11 месяцев назад

      It's not a real dog, all dogs are fake just like the spherical Earth!!

    • @stanlee4217
      @stanlee4217 11 месяцев назад

      the fact that he can have a straight face while lying through his teeth and find time to shoot ,produce, draw and edit these videos in minimum time really astonishes me....

    • @legacy8728
      @legacy8728 11 месяцев назад

      @@stanlee4217Awww, poor diddums. You need someone to pet/massage your ego to make you feel special too.

    • @d614gakadoug9
      @d614gakadoug9 11 месяцев назад +2

      Rusty does seem to be firmly of the opinion that if Dave is going to wave his hands about they should be used to pet Rusty.

    • @jonathangirier-dufournier7501
      @jonathangirier-dufournier7501 11 месяцев назад +3

      @stanlee4217 What lies has he said? Just out of curiosity, I'm not the brightest.

  • @James_Randis_Spirit
    @James_Randis_Spirit 11 месяцев назад +4

    Flat earthers seems to actually believe that there is a real debate about the shape of the earth.
    They don't seem to understand that flat earthers are just entertainment for smarter people.

  • @1FontMesa
    @1FontMesa 5 месяцев назад +4

    @DaveMcKeegan , I'm originally from Chicago, I was a commercial photographer and have taken hundreds of photos of the Chicago skyline. I can tell you with absolute certainty that the Chicago skyline photo in your video was not taken 50 miles east on the shoreline of the state of Michigan. However, it was taken 23 miles east of Chicago in the middle of Lake Michigan where the official state line of Michigan begins. Technically speaking anyone taking a photo from 23 miles east of Chicago can legally say the photo was taken from the state of Michigan.
    In the Chicago skyline photo to the left of the Willis tower is the 311 S Wacker drive building with a height of 960 ft. I know from experience photographing Chicago that in the photo in your video we're only seeing a little less than half of the 311 S Wacker building, so in the photo there's about 500 to 550 ft. of the bottoms of the skyline missing below the horizon.
    I've also seen photos that were actually taken from the Michigan shoreline 50 miles east of Chicago and two thirds of the bottom of the Willis tower is missing below the horizon.

  • @Ralph-yn3gr
    @Ralph-yn3gr 11 месяцев назад +9

    Something of a tangent (perhaps somewhat appropriately), but this reminds me of reading about something from World War II. USS _Atlanta_ was Shanghaied into helping USS _North Carolina_ (I think. She might have been helping _Washington_ instead) with an offset gunnery exercise off Guadalcanal. _North Carolina_ took aim at _Atlanta_ at maximum range, offset her rangefinder by a degree or two, and opened fire. _Atlanta's_ crew could only see the very top of _North Carolina's_ mast, where her big rangefinder is. One small puff of black smoke and about 30 seconds of flight time later and _Atlanta's_ crew were treated to the disconcerting experience of 9 16 inch shells smashing down in her wake. If not for the offset, they'd have hit dead center. _North Carolina_ proceeded to do this over and over and over again, never once properly coming into view or up over the horizon.

    • @Isolder74
      @Isolder74 11 месяцев назад

      It was USS Washington and the crack shot Adm Willis Lee.
      Edit: if added to a computer game he’d be called too OP!

    • @mikefochtman7164
      @mikefochtman7164 11 месяцев назад

      The 'offset' may have just been the target's course and speed. I was amazed at the analog fire-control system of WW II battleships. If the target is steaming at 20 knots, it'll have moved over 300 yds by the time the shell gets there so an estimate of target course and speed was one of many inputs. To be as accurate as they were is a testament to the engineering of those systems.

  • @rikcab
    @rikcab 11 месяцев назад +4

    5:19 That is one I learned long ago... If you stand on the beach and watch for the sun rising. The moment you see the sun breaking the horizon, lay down on the beach and you will not see the sun. So there's the curve, anyways this is just another way grifters/conmen marketing for those Patreon Dollar!

  • @alanclark639
    @alanclark639 11 месяцев назад +7

    Love this kind of stuff Dave. Once upon a time, I was taught and became quite good at working out what the Brit Army called "Intervisiblity" ( or did, when I were a lad!) Instead of spending huge amounts of time tromping up and down mountains to check what could be seen from higher up - we used a trig formula ( which I've completely forgotten!) applied to the contour height and distance from and to - this was very handy if you wanted to observe say a valley C from mountain A but with big hill B in between - the formula would be used to find the best vantage point. Don't suppose anyone is bothered now that "drones" are available.

  • @padders1068
    @padders1068 11 месяцев назад +5

    Dave, great video and very well explained! Keep up the good work!

  • @foogod4237
    @foogod4237 11 месяцев назад +15

    The "it's a parabola, not a circle" thing to me is less about accuracy and more about the fact that so many flerfers constantly claim that "8 inches per mile squared" is *the* formula that "all scientists" say is how you must calculate this stuff, when *it is just obviously not* because _it doesn't even represent the right shape_ and any _real_ scientist could immediately see that to be the case. Yes, it can be used as an approximation over short distances, but _that's never what the flerfers are actually claiming_ it's for. And the fact that they can't even understand that that formula is not _actually_ the formula for a spherical earth, because it mathematically cannot be, and it also _is not the formula that any scientist or earth curve calculator app actually uses,_ or claims to be accurate, just shows how little they understand about the reality of how any of this actually works.

    • @jasonmack760
      @jasonmack760 4 месяца назад

      Agreed. That's why it's important to argue that point, because that's Cult 101: Lie about the premise, then attack that premise. "This is their formula and it's obviously wrong, look!" Well, no, it's *not* our formula, but they'll keep repeating that lie because they desperately require their converts to be misinformed. Flat earth doesn't spread without misinformation and misunderstanding.

    • @phillyphakename1255
      @phillyphakename1255 4 месяца назад +1

      One of the key things I learned early on in engineering school is how useful approximations can be, and also to respect their limitations.
      There's plenty of useful approximations that engineers use everyday, the thin walled stress approximation for cylinders, the coherence of electromagnetic waves after 10 wavelengths, etc. these aren't reality, but they are damn close for almost every use.
      But we scientists and engineers must still acknowledge and justify our use of approximations. 8 in/mi/mi is a great approximation, if and only if you respect its limits. The fact that flerfs don't acknowledge that it's an approximation, don't acknowledge the limits and justify the use of this approximation shows their deep ignorance of science, math, engineering, etc.

    • @martinconnelly1473
      @martinconnelly1473 4 месяца назад

      @@phillyphakename1255 The 8" per mile² comes from surveying text books in the USA. It is referred to as Cc, curvature correction. Actually it is not 8" per mile it is 8*miles² and the result is in inches. The eight is a constant and it could equally be 0.66666*miles² and the answer is in feet. The metric equivalent used in the rest of the world is - Curvature correction: Cc = -0.07849 * D² (D is in kilometres) answer is in metres. It is used by surveyors along with a refraction correction Rc to get readings from a surveyor's level over the relatively small distances a surveyor will normally be working at. Goes like this, an assistant holds a surveying staff on the ground 1000m away and the surveyor looks through their level and reads off a height from the staff. The surveyor takes that reading, subtracts the height of their level from the ground it is on, subtracts Cc and adds Rc to come up with the figure for the height difference of the surveyed point with the observer's position. If you want to know why it is a parabolic value which does not match the surface of a sphere consider this. A circle on a cartesian graph centred at x0, y0 has the formula r²=x²+y² (Thanks go to Pythagoras). For the earth r is the earth's radius, a pretty big number in miles or kilometres. At the top of the circle at x=0 y=r so y²=r². If you move along the x axis the amount likely to be used in surveying x is going to be a small distance compared to r or y so x² is small enough to be ignored and you just look at the changes to y due to the small angular change. This is why until x becomes significant the shape of a parabola is very close to a section of a circle, another approximation that can be useful but has limitations. Another approximation is that over these small distances the surveying staff can be considered parallel to a plumb line at the surveyor's level.

    • @stephenolan5539
      @stephenolan5539 4 месяца назад

      ​@phillyphakename1255
      And is usefull for engineering jokes. 😊
      Google joke close enough for all practical purposes.

  • @magicknight8412
    @magicknight8412 11 месяцев назад +2

    Always calm, collected and pleasantly explains things without resorting to insults, name calling or getting angry/triggered. Flerfers take note.

  • @KarstenBenz
    @KarstenBenz 11 месяцев назад +2

    Another good reason to use this approximation in the 'good old days' of engineering is that it's really easy to calculate on a slide rule.

  • @mangojulie123
    @mangojulie123 11 месяцев назад +3

    Excellent explanation Dave! You always nail these things.

  • @brettmajeske3525
    @brettmajeske3525 11 месяцев назад +7

    Another issue most people forget, is the "squared". Miles squared is not a linear unit of distance, but a planer unit. When Flat Earthers' say "8 inches per mile squared", they mean "8 inches per linear mile".

    • @stuartgray5877
      @stuartgray5877 11 месяцев назад +3

      NO that is not what is meant. What is meant IS: "8 inches times the number of miles squared"

    • @JavaBum
      @JavaBum 11 месяцев назад

      What?

    • @0LoneTech
      @0LoneTech 11 месяцев назад +2

      stuart has it right; it describes the formula, not a conversion factor. Here's an example translated into Qalculate as a function called paradrop.
      > angle(x) := x arcmin/NauticalMile
      > EarthRadius = radian * NauticalMile / arcmin
      > drop(x) := (1-cos (x arcmin/NauticalMile)) * EarthRadius
      > paradrop(x) := 8in*(x/mile)^2
      > compare(x) := transpose (vector(drop x, paradrop x, drop x - paradrop x, (paradrop x-dropx)/drop x))
      > [compare(1km), compare(10km), compare(100km), compare(1000km), compare(3000km)]
      [compare(1 kilometer) compare(10 kilometers) compare(100 kilometers) compare(1000 kilometers) compare(3000 kilometers)] ≈
      (78.53 mm) (7.853 m) (785.3 m) (78.37 km) (693.8 km)
      (78.46 mm) (7.846 m) (784.6 m) (78.46 km) (706.1 km)
      (77.57 μm) (7.756 mm) (759.6 mm) (−83.74 m) (−12.28 km)
      −9.878E-4 −9.876E-4 −9.673E-4 0.001069 0.01770
      That's a relative error under 2% at 3Mm. I divided by the mile unit to get "number of miles" before squaring, which is dimensionless. Side note, here I'm assuming it's surface distance, not horizontal distance, that is the argument for the function. They're nearly identical for small angles anyway.
      The formula has nothing to do with what's hidden, it only describes how far off horizontal will be from level in the distance.

    • @d614gakadoug9
      @d614gakadoug9 11 месяцев назад +1

      I've heard a couple of flerfs say "eight inches per square mile" and I'm pretty sure it wasn't just a slip of the tongue in either case. Similarly I've heard one refer to the "inverse squares [plural] law."

    • @0LoneTech
      @0LoneTech 11 месяцев назад

      ​​@@d614gakadoug9I just worked it out from the Taylor series again, and one form is "drop / distance² ≈ 8 inches / mile²". The squarings match because it's derived from (distance/radius of Earth), which is an angle (dimensionless). If you solve it for drop, you get "drop ≈ 8 inches * (distance/mile)²", which I prefer because it doesn't split the square and keeps all operations on one side, but spoken aloud it often gets ambiguous; "square mile" is "mile²" is "mile squared", but where did the squared distance go?
      Meanwhile there's an entirely unrelated inverse square law, which has to do with the spread of e.g. light or gravitational pull over a surface with distance. And when that's applied to a reflection, like the light we see from the moon, you get squared squared inverses.

  • @casperhansen826
    @casperhansen826 11 месяцев назад +2

    The very fact that the formula exists proves that the Earth is curving

  • @Tvngsten
    @Tvngsten 4 месяца назад +1

    The mere fact that they use the imperial system already discredits them entirely

  • @srStinnky
    @srStinnky 11 месяцев назад +4

    And also this formulas for the curvature are meant to measure perfect spheres, which the earth is not, even it can have large amounts of land actually flat but in the full scale it’s basically a sphere

  • @randyrobertson4686
    @randyrobertson4686 11 месяцев назад +6

    Honestly though Dave, as much sense as your video makes and even people with remedial education can actually grasp these concepts, remember….and I have stated this countless times, the flat earth individual is suffering from an illness. I suspect it is on par with an addiction illness or a chronic lack of the ability to realize and understand that you were wrong.
    No different than a thief being shown a video of them committing the crime and insisting that it is not them. The hypothetical person who caught this individual has them dead to rights….and it could be a crystal clear picture of their face and an accurate height of the person can be established along with witness testimony, yet they will until their dying day claim that it is not them in the video. Dave, it’s like trying to change someone’s religion or political ideology. It is practically impossible. So maybe one day a pill will be developed that will help these poor souls but until then…I truly give you credit for dealing with the childish behavior and viewpoints that are culminated in the realms of the flat earthers mind.

  • @finnmaccool3385
    @finnmaccool3385 11 месяцев назад +2

    The most surprising lesson I learned in this video was that Rusty actually does have back legs.

  • @mr89firebird
    @mr89firebird 4 месяца назад

    The observations made which led to the math used to create the earth curve calculator is a beautiful demonstration of the scientific process. From hypothesis to formulae to predictions which match what we are able to observe is what the scientific process is all about.

  • @LEXICON369
    @LEXICON369 11 месяцев назад +3

    5:05 Get back to scratches, human

    • @jimnaden5594
      @jimnaden5594 4 месяца назад

      My most recent dog would do that stuff. He would even put his head to my hand and move his head so he got his scratches.
      Reilly was a good boy and I miss him.

  • @jocec3283
    @jocec3283 11 месяцев назад +3

    Rememeber that time, when a flat-earther, instead of going out of his way to deny the globe, actually came up with evidence to prove flat-earth ??
    Neither do I...

  • @FearlessLeader2001
    @FearlessLeader2001 11 месяцев назад +2

    I do love that Dave corrects both sides in this video. Very well made, I actually learned a few things in this video.

  • @jwb932
    @jwb932 11 месяцев назад +2

    Glad to see you point out the biggest error people make when trying to use 8 inches per miles squared: they get the angle of a person's view wrong or don't account for it altogether.

  • @kleeklor
    @kleeklor 11 месяцев назад +9

    I always tell flerfs to graph this shit.
    I also tell people who know we live on a globe to graph it too, because while it is a parabola, its actually oretty accurate for an observer with an eye height of 0 out to around 175 miles.
    I also always use the part where the fact that they do fit quite closely for a while as evidence that flerfs haven't done the math, because that would be the natural response to "it's a parabola"

    • @givmi_more_w9251
      @givmi_more_w9251 11 месяцев назад +4

      They don't even understand a simple concept like a tangent. We cannot expect them to grasp that a parabola can approximate a circle in 2D.

    • @thearmouredpenguin7148
      @thearmouredpenguin7148 11 месяцев назад +1

      It depends on exactly how you measure the distance (tangential distance or along the curve) but it's within 1% at around 750miles.

    • @ReinoGoo
      @ReinoGoo 11 месяцев назад +1

      You can do the math with the corde instead of the circumference.

  • @scotrick3072
    @scotrick3072 11 месяцев назад +4

    Thank you!
    Every time I hear that formula, my brain, which is terrible at math and math concepts, still, my brain said: wait, but, that's not enough?
    To describe our experience with seeing the globe, and sure enough!
    The height!
    The formula as described is like a floppy string with no anchor point, no reference, until you anchor the viewer's height: thank you. :)

  • @marcosmith6613
    @marcosmith6613 11 месяцев назад

    I for one appreciate the way Dave links into the sponsor, makes me smile every time.

  • @charleshill506
    @charleshill506 5 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for shining a light on this subject. I had never understood how viewing height above the ground changed how the drop should be calculated.

  • @Sponge1310
    @Sponge1310 11 месяцев назад +3

    It’s nice you can actually admit you were wrong/not completely accurate in the past, while flerfs stick to their statements no matter how wrong they are, even if they probably secretly deep down inside know they are wrong, but just too scared/ashamed, stubborn or maybe even stupid to admit it.
    To any flerf out there reading this; it’s okay to admit you were wrong, we won’t think less of you, it’s not the end of the world.

  • @Katy_Jones
    @Katy_Jones 11 месяцев назад +3

    The BIG question about this springs to mind.....
    Will Slappy show up still lying about being a pilot or will he be unable to resist showing off the lovely plumage of his Norwegian Blue, i mean Black Swan?

  • @rectorsquid
    @rectorsquid 8 месяцев назад

    Wow that was a long commercial for My Heritage.
    I never realized that the horizon would not be lined up with level at high altitude. I never thought about it one way or the other. I'm glad that I saw this before it ever came up in casual conversation or I might have embarrassed myself. Thanks for saving me from that embarrassment.

  • @enderthexenocide760
    @enderthexenocide760 11 месяцев назад

    This was the best most complete explanation for this effect I have ever seen. Great video!

  • @janedoe6181
    @janedoe6181 11 месяцев назад +3

    I can’t believe how quickly your channel has grown!! Well, actually I can believe it; your explanations are well laid out and easy to understand. I’ve been here since your first flat earth video. I’ll be cheering you on to that 100K subscriber achievement. Well done.

    • @Sanok-29
      @Sanok-29 11 месяцев назад +3

      It's because of his dog, lol. :-)

  • @sapper713
    @sapper713 11 месяцев назад +4

    Hi Dave, really enjoying your channel and content pal. I watched a video yesterday of a parachutist doing a HALO jump from 41000ft and you could clearly see the earths curvature as he exited the plane. Would love to see you explain the camera work on a similar video (anything that pains the flerfs 😂)

  • @firecloud77
    @firecloud77 5 месяцев назад

    Excellent explanation.
    I like how the dog is trying to get your attention, to get you to stop talking to a little box on a tripod.

  • @FuelX
    @FuelX 11 месяцев назад +2

    I was trying to explain this to a viewer of I Can Science That a few weeks ago about a lake in his vicinity. I hope he's watching this video and listening well because you explain it much better than I did.

  • @NicoLeDahut
    @NicoLeDahut 11 месяцев назад +7

    Glober here! If you use 6.7 in.mi2, it take into account standard refraction. And if you reverse it with observer altitude to get distance to horizon that you subtract to observer to target distance, then you use 6.7 in.mi2 to get hidden height. It is quite good under 100 mi observations! Still it is a rough estimate. Also notice that Rawbotham do not indicate the drop perpendicular to the tangente but angled toward earth center. Anyway the difference is negligible for short distance!

    • @duncanmcneill7088
      @duncanmcneill7088 11 месяцев назад +2

      But what is that in PROPER units?
      e.g. 7.85cm per km^2

    • @MichaelOnines
      @MichaelOnines 11 месяцев назад

      @@duncanmcneill7088 Refraction correction can be estimated at 1/7th of curvature correction. In the surveying text I have from my freshman year the curvature and refraction correction can be calculated together at 6.75cm per km^2.

    • @NicoLeDahut
      @NicoLeDahut 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@duncanmcneill7088 8in.mi2 is an empiric formula, so unit goes to trash! Normally result should be a volume! It is a point I throw to flerf face as well.

    • @NicoLeDahut
      @NicoLeDahut 11 месяцев назад

      No forgetting it multiple in by mi by mi to result in in. Flerf magic!

    • @MichaelOnines
      @MichaelOnines 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@NicoLeDahut More specifically it is an engineering equation, so all the unit conversions were bundled into the constant and are implied by the equation. Half the EIT exam is knowing what unit conversions are bundled into the equation sheet and what unit conversions are not.

  • @zorinzorinzorin5243
    @zorinzorinzorin5243 11 месяцев назад +3

    At this point I watch these videos primarily to see if Dave will ever defeat his dog in their constant battle of hand-to-paw combat.

  • @supernoobsmith5718
    @supernoobsmith5718 11 месяцев назад

    👍Thank you for covering this, I've been wanting this for a while now. 👍

  • @jayarenneilson6049
    @jayarenneilson6049 10 месяцев назад

    thank you for the diffraction image - that clarified a lot to me - it even made me re-evaluate how I thought of it working with glass and lenses.
    great video.

  • @TonyHammitt
    @TonyHammitt 11 месяцев назад +3

    The horizon IS the curvature of the Earth. No matter what your height is, the horizon is where the Earth curves away out of view. Period.

    • @emaarredondo-librarian
      @emaarredondo-librarian 11 месяцев назад +2

      Exactly. In a flat Earth, we shouldn't see any horizon, ever. In every case, a blur caused by the atmosphere.

  • @righty-o3585
    @righty-o3585 11 месяцев назад +11

    Also, if you put a coin on the ground in front of you. What is the difference between that coin and eye level? Probably about 5.5 feet give or take. If you move that coin 50 feet away from you. What is the difference between your eye level, and the level at which the coin sits in the ground? Still 5.5 feet and it will remain at that level untill it is moved far enough away that it drops behind the horizon. So the horizon does not rise to eye level

    • @mangojulie123
      @mangojulie123 11 месяцев назад

      Think about this...even if the Earth were flat, the horizon would NEVER rise to the level of your eyes! The difference in height between your eye level and the coin/floor will ALWAYS be 5.5 feet no matter how far away the coin is moved. Flat Earthers are just morons.

    • @righty-o3585
      @righty-o3585 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@mangojulie123 Exactly my point 😁

    • @righty-o3585
      @righty-o3585 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@mangojulie123 Not only that, but flat earthers believe that the earth is disc shaped right. So it's still round in their idea. Which means the horizon would still appear curved. The only way the horizon would appear flat, is if the earth was square

    • @mangojulie123
      @mangojulie123 11 месяцев назад

      @@righty-o3585 You and I think very much alike. That's why they had to also bring the conspiracy of space travel...we can't go into space to take a picture of their pancake earth 🤣. And even if the Earth were infinitely flat as some flerfs claim, the horizon would still appear curved because the radius of the limit of vision of our eyes would carve out perfectly curve.

    • @righty-o3585
      @righty-o3585 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@mangojulie123 Bro, I remember like 8 years ago, when this new era of flat earth just started gaining some attention. Somebody had commented about how because of gravity in space, the default shape for anything planet sized, is a globe, or sphere. And I replied..... DON'T LET EM HEAR YOU SAY THAT, THEY'LL START CLAIMING GRAVITY IS FAKE.... Sure as shit like 2 and a half years later. Wish I could have screen shotted lol

  • @jessezslayers
    @jessezslayers 11 месяцев назад +1

    9:27
    THANK YOU DAVE! I've been wondering why you sometimes see those "reflections" on pavement for a really long time, and now I finally have the answer

  • @CR3W1SH03S
    @CR3W1SH03S 4 месяца назад

    Your segues into your advertisements never ceases to amuse.

  • @c.augustin
    @c.augustin 11 месяцев назад +5

    Land surveyors used this formula (or rather one that actually *did* account for refraction) to calculate the drop of the horizontal in times when personal computers, laptops, pocket calculators and embedded computers weren't a thing. Nowadays the equipment has the calculating power to use the actual curvature for these calculations (I don't know if the old formula is still taught for when the equipment does not cooperate ;-)). It is really easy to understand, so it takes a lot of willpower by the flerfs to misunderstand and misrepresent it. Or maybe they are really that stupid that they are completely unable to understand it. Maybe both.

  • @s1rmunchalot
    @s1rmunchalot 11 месяцев назад +3

    Have flat Earthers ever explained why you can see clouds lit from underneath at sunrise and sunset and why it always has a more red component? I've never seen a model made by them that would account for it.

    • @uberterris7551
      @uberterris7551 10 месяцев назад +1

      Especially mammatus clouds after a severe thunderstorm. They're wavy lumpy texture produce shadows that make it so obvious they're being lit from the underside. I really curious about bringing this up.

  • @naxxtor
    @naxxtor 9 месяцев назад

    I like how even though i have no desire to engage flerfs in debate, i still learn something interesting from these videos. Thanks !

  • @ericbilodeau3897
    @ericbilodeau3897 7 месяцев назад +2

    Formulas 8"/mi^2 you want to graph
    y = -x^2/7920 + 3950
    This is just converting 8" into 1/7920 of a mile. The + 3950 is to shift the parabola up, so the vertex aligns with the north pole which is 3950mi above the center of the earth at the origin. Alternatively you could shift the elipse downward 3950 and have the north pole and parabola vertex at the origin.
    To graph the earth in miles you want to graph an elipse with major axis 3963mi and minor axis 3950mi. So you get
    (x/3963)^2 + (y/3950)^2 = 1
    The 8"/mi^2 is actually quite an accurate formula. You can calculate the discrepancy between the two curves by graphing
    Y = (-x^2/7920 + 3950) - 3950sqrt(1 - (x/3963)^2)
    If you do this you find the formula is quite accurate in absolute distances up to 550mi. The discrepancy is never more than 0.0323mi = 170.5ft in that range. Which is pretty good considering that occurs in conjunction with an actual drop of 15.94mi or roughly 0.2%.
    Considering percentage errors it's pretty accurate up to about 700mi. Over that range the error never exceeds 0.4%. Ranges of accuracy
    err < 0.1% : 436mi-560mi
    err < 0.2% : 357mi-614mi
    err < 0.3% : 255mi-661mi
    err < 0.4% : 47mi-706mi
    err < 0.5% : 0mi-748mi
    err < 1.0% : 0mi-928mi
    err < 5% : 0mi-1751mi
    err < 10% : 0mi-2319mi

  • @TheShaneWomack
    @TheShaneWomack 11 месяцев назад +5

    Good job, if we cant regulate our own group we would be as bad as they.

  • @GeistView
    @GeistView 11 месяцев назад +3

    What you will NEVER see is a Flat Earther using FLAT PLANAR Geometry to prove the Flat Earth.

  • @S1nwar
    @S1nwar 11 месяцев назад +2

    here let me use maths to explain why approximating a circle with a parable works:
    circle: y= srqt(r²-x²)
    parabola: y=ax²+b
    we care about the difference between these functions:
    ->Δy= circle - parabola= sqrt(r²-x²) - (ax²+b)
    we want to see what happens for small x, so xΔy≈ r - r= 0
    so in conclusion for small x the function values of circle and parabola are almost identical.
    that means for a few dozen km the approximation works absolutely fine.

    • @APaleDot
      @APaleDot 11 месяцев назад

      For the sake of mathematical accuracy, I want to point out that this is only a first order approximation, i.e. you've only shown that the tangent lines are equal. This is not surprising and it's also not something flat-earthers would dispute because a flat earth is also tangent to a circle (cause the tangent is flat). This can be easily seen by using a constant function y = r instead of the equation for a parabola.
      That means your equation for Δy would look like:
      Δy = circle - constant ≈ sqrt(r²-0) - r = r - r = 0
      You haven't taken curvature into account at all, unfortunately. The real reason a parabola is sufficient for approximating the curvature of a circle is because curvature only depends on the second derivative, and a parabola is the first polynomial to have a non-zero second derivative. The curvature of a circle and a parabola at its vertex are well known, and fairly simple to derive if you know how, but I won't go into it here. A circle's curvature is just 1 / r and a parabola's curvature at its vertex is 2a, so the two curvatures are exactly equal at the parabola's vertex when a = 1 / 2r. Here's a desmos graph demonstrating this principle: www.desmos.com/calculator/mdywqupmws
      Plugging in the radius of the Earth for r and multiplying by 63360 inches per mile gives 8.0024 inches per mile²

    • @S1nwar
      @S1nwar 11 месяцев назад

      @@APaleDot dude i wanted to keep it simple

    • @APaleDot
      @APaleDot 11 месяцев назад

      @@S1nwar
      Nothing complicated about 1/r and 2a.
      The problem is that your math doesn't show why a parabola is any better than a straight line.

  • @markduggan3451
    @markduggan3451 11 месяцев назад +2

    I'll be honest, I got confused, but at least I do understand that the world is a ball shape and NOT flat.

  • @denniswilson631
    @denniswilson631 11 месяцев назад +4

    IIRC the 8" equation comes from surveying. Because surveying is all about tangent lines at ground level and not about observer height, it was perfect for the job: a correction factor that 19th century surveyors could do in their heads. They knew it was an approximation, but it had less error than their instruments, so it was acceptable for short distances. I wish Dave had confirmed or debunked this. Maybe tack on one minute at the end . . . ?

    • @Katy_Jones
      @Katy_Jones 11 месяцев назад +3

      And that's why they all parrot it, because it was an approximation in use when Rowbotham was running his flat erf grift.

    • @BigBen621
      @BigBen621 11 месяцев назад +2

      As an approximation of the actual curvature of the earth, It's accurate to within a fraction of a percent out to around 500 miles.

  • @-ion
    @-ion 11 месяцев назад +5

    Another excellent demonstration of refraction is a notorious pair of photos of two oil rigs where one has a large amount of refraction, making straight objects appear bent, and the other has a more standard amount of refraction, causing the water to occlude the bottom of one of the oil rigs.
    The less refracted photo can be referred to as a "black swan" because even if you assume the horizon will never bulge and occlude your view to an object, just one demonstration of that happening is enough to invalidate that assumption.

  • @JPSkriP
    @JPSkriP 11 месяцев назад

    Yup. Everything checks out. Masterfully explained!! And all makes sense!!

  • @davidioanhedges
    @davidioanhedges 11 месяцев назад +2

    So 8" per mile^2 only works if you lie flat on a beach after the atmosphere has been stripped away ... and you can't use metric ...

  • @johnfitzgerald8879
    @johnfitzgerald8879 11 месяцев назад +3

    Yeah, too many words. Flearths aren't going to be able to pay attention to more than the first couple of minutes.

    • @justduro1527
      @justduro1527 11 месяцев назад +2

      Seconds*

    • @kiverix
      @kiverix 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@justduro1527lmao

  • @0cgw
    @0cgw 11 месяцев назад +9

    The constant 8''/mi² is half the average curvature of the Earth (it is simply a constant, not a formula), so 8''/mi² = 1/(2R) where R is the Earth's radius. This gives R=3960 mi once we convert to a consistent set of units.

    • @0LoneTech
      @0LoneTech 11 месяцев назад

      While you can extract that constant from the equations, it doesn't make much sense on its own; to "convert to a consistent set of units" you need an area, and why should that area be a square with our distance as the side length?
      Consider the Taylor series for the trigonometric drop formula R*(1-cos(x/R)):
      x²/(2!*R) - x⁴/(4!*R³) + x⁶/(6!*R⁵) ...
      Here the dimension of R matches up with the dimension of x, restoring each term to be length. All uses of x came from x/R, which is a dimensionless angle. Furthermore, while x/R is small we'll have a good approximation with just the first term, as factorial grows rapidly.
      Now we divide the first term drop ≈ x²/(2!*R) by x² to make it a constant: 1/2R, and find a unit where it's conveniently round:
      drop/x² ≈ 1 / (2 × EarthRadius) ≈ 8.008 in/mi² ≈ 7.853 cm/km²
      It is accurate that this is half the curvature. I'm not certain this observation helps connect any dots, though it could be a useful mnemonic. Both "half" and "squared" were specific to the first non-zero term of the series, and the constant does not communicate the part of the squaring that's been moved to the other side of the equation.
      Multiply x² back in, round a bit more, and you get drop ≈ (8 in/mi²) * x² = 8in*(x/mi)². This reunites the squaring of x/mi which makes dimensional sense as a ratio of lengths.
      Of course, something that confuses me could well seem intuitive to someone else.

    • @0cgw
      @0cgw 11 месяцев назад

      @@0LoneTech I agree with most of what you write after the first sentence. The first non-zero term in the Taylor series is equal to 1/(2R) which is ½κ, where κ=1/R is the curvature (and R is the radius of curvature of the curve: in this case a cross-section of Earth's surface). Using two different units, inches and miles, for length to define the same constant is unhelpful, and we can write 8''/mi²=[8/(12x3x1760)] mi/mi²= 1/(7956 mi) to put it into a consistent set of units. In mathematics, it is usual to measure the deviation of a curve at a point in terms of curvature (or radius of curvature if you must) rather than a local drop formula which depends on setting up a local coordinate system (see the Frenet-Serret formulae). [A quick aside: The drop formula can be truncated not because of the largeness of the growth of the factorials, but because we restrict its application to when x is sufficiently small. Had the formula not involved the cosine, but was R/(1-(x/2R)²) = R+(x²/2R)-(x⁴/8R³)+... (or any other series with a convergent series expansion) we would still have been able to apply it for sufficiently small x. Obviously the drop formula does involve a cosine, bt many other formulae do not and the truncations of their Taylor series are good provided x (the perturbation) is small.]
      I find your first sentence confusing when talking about an area. We do not talk about an area of time when discussing acceleration and it would unhelpful in doing so, why should this second order derivative be treated any differently? In any case, he above conversion was simply converting inches into miles.

    • @0LoneTech
      @0LoneTech 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@0cgw I agree it's unhelpful to consider this squared length an area, because the length is cancelled in the very argument to cosine, and was entirely irrelevant to the derivative which produced the exponent. You consider it obvious it's part of the derivative, where both sides coexist; but the only link to derivatives was calling the expression a curvature. I believe you're right that Taylor series, like polynomials in general, should be truncatable for small values; I used the coefficient series to get me some idea of how small. Like any tool, you need some idea of where to apply it. Many will only half-remember the steps, not the context.

  • @michaelorth6668
    @michaelorth6668 11 месяцев назад

    Hi Dave keep up the good work!

  • @pierremainstone-mitchell8290
    @pierremainstone-mitchell8290 11 месяцев назад

    "How strange" - what a line Dave, what a line! Great video btw!

  • @oledhaeseleer
    @oledhaeseleer 11 месяцев назад +3

    Quick correction:
    More humidity means lower density, not higher. H²O is a rather light molecule.

    • @ThatOneStopSign
      @ThatOneStopSign 11 месяцев назад +1

      Also in order for air to have water dissolved in it, its temperature needs to be a bit warm, which decreases density. As soon as the air cools it becomes too dense to have dissolved water and it precipitates out.

  • @FlatEarthMath
    @FlatEarthMath 11 месяцев назад +9

    Hello Dave! Can I mention a bit about that whole parabola thing? Believe it or not the 8"/mi² formula is remarkably accurate out to a quarter -planet, tracing a perfect circular arc, so long as the distance is measured along the chord. Great video, as always!

  • @timothycollins3829
    @timothycollins3829 2 месяца назад

    Great video. One thig that struck me is that it is a prime example of the frustration on how to address simplistic arguments. To fully explain the whys and hows, science (and real life in general) requires a detailed explanation and requires the listener being willing to learn.
    On the other hand, the simplistic argument latches on to a simple easy to repeat phrase that they can repeat ad nauseum. It may be wrong, but the debunking of it can require a detailed argument that can go over many people's heads.
    Thank you Dave for making straight forward videos that explain and debunk the arguments without descending into ridicule.

  • @KCadbyRacing
    @KCadbyRacing 11 месяцев назад

    This is the best explanation of eye sight location (height and distance from horizon) and light refraction I've ever seen 👍👍