FAQ/Stars: Difference between revisions

added Stellar Parallax
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Some people send light sensitive cameras above the atmosphere and were not unable to see stars. More experiments needs to be done there. They are mysterious indeed. Planets emit light exactly like stars do which means they aren't terra firma.
 
===Stellar Parallax? ===
Parallax is where objects closer to you appear to move more. Put you hand in front of your face; Close one eye, then switch. Have a friend stand across the room from you and Close one eye, then switch again; it moves much less.
 
There is no stellar parallax because stars are all about the same altitude. This proves a flat earth. This is also the reason why [[Agencies/NASA|NASA]] claims some stars are up to a billion light years away. Because you would not be able to confirm if there was a parallax, only they would be able to "confirm" it. However, because of this lie, they need to tell everyone the solar system, our galaxy (milky way) and universe is flat. This is because the stars move along the same altitude/plane and there is no other way to explain it. Of course they live to make things up as they go about "Quasars" or "Black holes" or "Dark matter", or whatever sensationalist space nonsense. They invent these theories like "Dark matter" based on math models without actually knowing if their theory is true. Then they claim those theories as facts, using theories to alter facts instead of facts altering theories. They commonly say they see things 5+ billion light years away... so that sextillions of miles. a number unfathomable. It's shocking that people think they can see that far (as light would be blocked at that point).
 
Paradoxically if there was that many visible stars in the sky, then the entire sky would be lit. what we see is opposite, it's mostly dark. The sidereal day and stellar days are faster than the solar day, how can this be if both are supposedly caused by the earths spin? Those days supposedly measure the time it takes the stars to rotate. That should bring into question "How long is a day?" Of course round earth makes up some excuse saying it appears this way because the earth goes around the sun ad the same time. Because light refracts, light would never statistically be able to been seen from millions of light years away. All elements cause some degree of refraction. The probability that light would refract off of something causing even a slight angle change in turn would cause it's light to miss the earth completely. Stars would never keep a stable position in the sky due to refraction. In fact, because of refraction, Astronomers will not measure stars below 20 degrees on the horizon because the air refracts it too much. The air alone makes measuring the stellar parallax from earth impossible.
 
=== How far are the stars from us? ===