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Flat Earth Theory / Re: Appearance of the sun
« on: Today at 07:26:31 PM »That doesn't explain why the Sun has layers with radically different temperatures, or why the photosphere is so much cooler than the sun's atmosphere.
Well, you were just remarking on the darkness not on what causes the layers to be which causes darkness.
And your explanation seems to be a projection just like mine seems to be layers. And I didn't describe what causes the layers to work the way they do just like you haven't described what causes the projection.
So where is this projector and how does it operate? That, as well, remains one of the greatest unanswered questions in FET.
You can find various articles which get published every so often which claim to have solved it like any other major problem, but those are not the consensus that it is a mystery in Astronomy. There are "we solved it!" papers published practically every year or two, but the next year something will be published suggesting that it's a mystery. The official stance is generally that it's a mystery.
Even NASA's standard educational materials admit that it's a historic mystery that still persists:
https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/12903QuoteDiscovering the Sun’s Mysteriously Hot Atmosphere
Something mysterious is going on at the Sun. In defiance of all logic, its atmosphere gets much, much hotter the farther it stretches from the Sun’s blazing surface.
Temperatures in the corona — the Sun’s outer atmosphere — spike to 3 million degrees Fahrenheit, while just 1,000 miles below, the underlying surface simmers at a balmy 10,000 F. How the Sun manages this feat is a mystery that dates back nearly 150 years, and remains one of the greatest unanswered questions in astrophysics. Scientists call it the coronal heating problem.
See: "remains one of the greatest unanswered questions in astrophysics" and look up the definition of "remains".
In FET, how does the projected corona get so hot?