I hate to mention it again, but since I mentioned “The Final Experiment” before, I guess I should note that it has been concluded. On 14 December, observers in Antarctica watched the sun stay above the horizon for 24 hours, as predicted. Ho hum.
This was a stupid, attention-grubbing stunt. People have lived and worked in Antarctica for decades, so this phenomenon has been reported many times. It’s routine. The only novelty is that this evangelical pastor, Will Duffy, dredged up some of the dumbest people on the internet and spent a lot of money to get them to stand somewhere near the South Pole and look up. Some concede that what they saw doesn’t fit their expectations, while lots of others stayed home and closed their eyes. This “experiment” will accomplish nothing, other than to advertise an anti-abortion evangelical freak as somehow pro-science. Flat earth is being used as a tool for science-washing Christian nonsense.
drksky says
I’ve been following this as it is mildly entertaining and have been pleasantly surprised that Will has pretty much never mentioned religion, god, or anything non-secular, as far as I have seen anyway.
Not all of them are FE dummies, tho.
Reginald Selkirk says
Question: would you claim to be a flat-earther just to get a trip to Antarctica?
submoron says
Please. Can someone set me right?
If the Earth were a static disc then anything farther than 24/2pi (=3.8197) light hours away would be moving faster than the speed of light.
Is this wrong or trivial please?
stuffin says
One day at my job a guy (Tom) from another department approached me and my co-worker. Tom started by saying if a helicopter lifts off and hovers at one hundred feet above the ground for 30 minutes when it lands why does it come down in the same place? Waiting for a nice explanation he then said “the world is flat, and the helicopter experiment proves it (otherwise the helicopter would come down in a different spot). I was stunned I couldn’t speak, same for my co-worker who is in non-religious. Tom then talked for 10 minutes about the flat earth through a religious eye, and all I could do was listened and utter uh huh. I don’t know why the helicopter does that but I’m certain there is a very logical explanation. This conversation blindsided me, and since the only thing I say to him is hello Tom. Every time I see him engaged in conversation with a customer or co-worker I wonder if he is pontificating his nonsense. I’ve made the decision to say away from him because I’m afraid I’d lose it if we got into a discussion. Would not be worth it.
drewl, Mental Toss Flycoon says
@2 Reginald…
Free trip to Antarctica? Why, yes. Yes I would claim to be a ‘Flat Earther’.
I have this amazing experiment with a marble that should only work with 24 hour sunlight.
Where do I sign up to get my grant?
Hope Gross says
stuffin: it’s pretty simple honestly, the inertial frame of reference for the planet means that yes, if you go up, you should still be moving rotationally at the same speed as you were on the ground. The problem is, 100 feet and 30 minutes is nowhere near enough time for the ground level and the “100 feet up level” speeds to desync far enough for you to notice.
In 30 minutes, the earth rotates approximately 360/48 degrees, or 5 degrees of arc. The earth has a radius of approximately 6371 km, or 6.371 million meters. 100 feet is about 30.5 meters. So we can now figure out how far you will travel by considering the 5 degrees of arc at ground level and 100 feet up.
6,371,000 * 2pi / 48 = 833961.95 (rounding to the nearest centimeter)
6,371,030.5 * 2pi / 48 = 833965.94 (rounding to the nearest centimeter)
This is a difference of 4 meters, or about 13 feet. Note: the standard size for the SMALLEST helipad in Canada is 5 meters.
This of course is considering 0 km/h windspeed. The reason why you end up in the same spot is because you’re not spending enough time in the air, and you’re not going high enough. It’s the same argument about “oh I climbed this hill but the horizon is still flat, checkmate”. They don’t understand the sheer scale of the planet and how much spheres (or sphere approximates) look flat when you zoom in far enough.
Reginald Selkirk says
@4, 6
A helicopter has active correction of its position. Try the same experiment with a balloon. The odds of it coming down in the same spot are close to nil.
Of course it’s movement is due mostly to the influence of winds, which vary in time and place, and not directly to the curvature of the Earth.
Dunc says
There is, buried in the definition of hovering. We don’t usually explicitly state it, but hovering means holding position relative to the ground. We don’t have a neat term for holding position relative to distant astronomical reference points, and if we did it would throw up all sorts of problems around the Earth moving along its orbit as well as rotating.
There’s also the point that the atmosphere (which the helicopter is hovering in) rotates along with the surface, which is why we’re not all being buffeted by ~1000 km/hr winds right now.
birgerjohansson says
BTW the coriolis effect is not strong enough to affect your bathtub [contrary to urban myths], but it will affect the trajectories of long-range artillery.
The Royal Navy noticed that during WWI when they used artillery tables for the northern hemisphere at the battle of the Falkland Islands (the future German amiral Canaris was one of the survivirs of the battle).
Larry says
Sure, use your fancy numbers and “mathematical” equations and “scientific” explanations all your want. I do my own research and it tells me that the Earth is flat and the helicopter test is just one more piece of evidence that I’ll include. No egg-head, pointy haired, lab-coat wearing geek will ever convince me otherwise.
mordred says
submoron@3: Moderately distant objects moving faster than the speed of light is a problem of a static earth. The problems with a flat earth start long before that and while I haven’t studied all the different flat earth theories in depth, I’m pretty sure nearly of them reside in a universe where stars are something very different.
birgerjohansson says
Even Ken Ham has spoken out against Flat Earth believers. This is significant.
Rob Grigjanis says
Hope Gross @6: No, Dunc @8 has the gist of it. If the windspeed relative to the ground at whatever height the helicopter is hovering is zero, it will stay put above the same point on the ground.
There is a drift westwards at landing for objects fired straight up, that’s due to the Coriolis force (as birger @9 notes), which depends on the velocity of the object.
drksky says
Most flerfs have a severe misunderstanding of the scale of the earth. A basketball will look flat to a microorganism that’s the same scale of a human relative to earth. I think the vast majority of them, like something on the order of 99.99999%, are trolls in it for the yucks or have made a career and good living out of looking stupid on the internet, which seems to be the only reliable way to make a living on the internet.
submoron says
Mordred@11. Many thanks for sorting that out for me. The speed of light business occured to me independently and I wanted to know whether I was right or not.
Yes, I’m aware of Alfred russel Wallace and the canal experiment as an example of the problems. I had a copy of the ‘Universal Gravity a Universal Lie’ pamphlet which ended in the assertion that seen through a telescope ships shrink in size rather than disappearing below the horizon hull first.
Robbo says
@6 Hope Gross: nice calculation.
I’d like to explain for others, why the helicopter scenario is used by flat earthers.
They think that if the helicopter goes straight up, hovers for 30 minutes, then lands, it should come down in a different place. Their reasoning is that the tangential velocity of the earth’s surface is about 1000 mph. if the helicopter is up in the air for 1/2 hr, it should land about 500 miles away from where it started because the earth rotated underneath it. but it doesn’t do this. so they think it’s a “gotcha!” argument.
this argument ignores the inertia of the helicopter and the atmosphere. if the helicopter goes up, Hope Gross’ calc shows that the helicopter does move a bit relative to the earth, if there is no atmosphere. but nowhere near 500 miles, because physics.
by the flat earther reasoning, if you are passenger in a car on the freeway, and toss a ball up, it should land 50 feet behind you, since the car moves 50 feet ahead away from the ball.
this flat earth argument ignores inertia, conservation of momentum, and everyone’s experience travelling in cars.
Larry says
birgerjohansson@12
No, it says even a jesus-soaked religious whack job can’t always be wrong.
jack lecou says
That’s almost giving them too much credit. I think that would be pretty relatable. We all fail to grasp the true scale of the planet to some extent.
But most of us don’t literally think that a plane flying from Japan to Australia ends up in inverted flight. Or that Australians are upside down and would fall off “if the Earth was a ball”. Or that helicopters and baseballs and falling leaves should accelerate to a thousand miles per hour as soon as they lose contact with the surface…
Well, as far as the major flerf internet personalities, I agree. I think most or all of them are just in it for the grift and don’t actually believe what they’re saying (does Poe’s law cover that?). If nothing else, their reluctance to take a free trip to Antarctica proves they know perfectly what they — and their followers through them — would have seen.
But that’s the thing: I do think most of their followers are genuinely fooled. People like the guy stuffin @4 was talking about.
Which is scary.
Reginald Selkirk says
@16 Robbo
There are complications. A car has an enclosed air space. So imagine a rail car. A tossed ball will behave different in a closed box car (with an enclosed air space) vs a flatbed car, where the ball is exposed to the wind. With wind exposure, the behavior of the ball depends on its density. A billiard ball will behave differently from an inflated hollow rubber ball. I guess you could mount a giant vacuum chamber on a train car…
robro says
birgerjohansson @ #12 — “Even Ken Ham has spoken out against Flat Earth believers. This is significant.” Dan McClellan has a piece out that starts with a video of some Christians citing Biblical verses…Ezekiel I think…use of a word which they translate as “orb” or “sphere”. They are making the claim that the Biblical writers knew that the Earth is a sphere. McClellan says they are mistranslating the word to gin up an apologetic. The word used in the passage actually means “circle” or “disc” which is consistent with the cosmology of the time of writing: the Earth is a disc that sits in an encircling ocean which is surrounded by a wall of ice. McClellan isn’t defending flat-earth but refuting bad Bible scholarship.