I'm in the UK, at 3pm this afternoon I saw the moon quite clearly, not 'bright' (obviously) but could be seen clearly. At the same time, my Son was on the other end of the phone, just chatting away and, he mentioned how bright the moon was, where he was looking at? So, I'm in the UK seeing the moon in daylight, and he's looking at the moon, in *_Napier, New Zealand_* (12 hours ahead of me!) How can that be?
Well, if you think about it, logically you’re in space on a planet that is habitable and you’re 12 hours away from New Zealand which is a couple to a few thousand miles away or a couple to several thousand kilometers away for your translation so basically your pretty far distance on different parts of the planet so you’re going to see the moon in different angles
@@KyzoFoxBut, it's a straight line distance of 19,000 kilometres? It's a mere few thousand Ks. to being opposite the two locations? (i.e. on the other side of the planet?) looking at a global depiction, it's quite impossible to see if (almost) diametrically opposite?
@@del_boy_trotter not really but, yes I know it’s weird. But if you travel North Pole, the moon will look different than it will South Pole. Also, depending on the position of the person on the planet depends were they will see the moon.
Thanks so much for showing us all this. Looks pretty impressive!
Wow they have come a long way with digital NV. In color as well.😮
Is this a Nighy vision app or something
Uhhh what? No, I’m using a digital night vision device called NVG30. You should check it out
I'm in the UK, at 3pm this afternoon I saw the moon quite clearly, not 'bright' (obviously) but could be seen clearly. At the same time, my Son was on the other end of the phone, just chatting away and, he mentioned how bright the moon was, where he was looking at?
So, I'm in the UK seeing the moon in daylight, and he's looking at the moon, in *_Napier, New Zealand_* (12 hours ahead of me!) How can that be?
Well, if you think about it, logically you’re in space on a planet that is habitable and you’re 12 hours away from New Zealand which is a couple to a few thousand miles away or a couple to several thousand kilometers away for your translation so basically your pretty far distance on different parts of the planet so you’re going to see the moon in different angles
It’s based off of the position of where you are on the planet of earth, determines the angle of where you’re going to see the moon
@@KyzoFoxBut, it's a straight line distance of 19,000 kilometres? It's a mere few thousand Ks. to being opposite the two locations? (i.e. on the other side of the planet?) looking at a global depiction, it's quite impossible to see if (almost) diametrically opposite?
@@del_boy_trotter not really but, yes I know it’s weird. But if you travel North Pole, the moon will look different than it will South Pole. Also, depending on the position of the person on the planet depends were they will see the moon.
Also, to you. You may not see the moon as good as someone else in another country
Lujan eat your fucking heart out.
Yo dude, chill! What this for lol?
Who the heck is lujan?
@@KyzoFoxLujan is the dungeon. i'm the killer inside the dungeon.
@@KyzoFoxi'm sk everytime i play towns of salem. i'm sk all day
@@KyzoFoxlol. ugh... Lujan is a psy-op recruiter for the Army. calm down. i'm just joking.