I have recently brought special attention to the concept of lunar light in the Flat Earth model. The moon emits its own light, which cools objects.
How?
Light contains energy, in photons.
Photons are little packets of energy that heat things up.
Heat is energy, after all. It's the movement of atoms.
Leave something out in the summer sun all day and it will get hot from the energy transfer.
That's how photo-voltaic solar panels work. They absorb that energy, and convert it to electricity.
In the round earth reality, the moon does not heat things because it only reflects to earth, about 17% of the sun's illumination.
It's why there's no such thing as 'lunar panels'. It's pitifully inefficient.
The sun is far more powerful, making the moon seem colder.
So the question stands, how does the moon's light remove energy?
Antimatter photons?
Magic?
Nanomachines?
Some undiscovered subatomic particle that sucks away energy?
Could we make a light that does the same thing?
Please enlighten me on the subject.