The Flat Earth Society
Flat Earth Discussion Boards => Flat Earth Theory => Topic started by: ChrisV on February 26, 2018, 07:36:43 PM
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Good day ,
I am new to your forum and find it very interesting. I always ask myself, since I was 16 years old, questions like if the earth spins so fast why don't we fly off the surface of earth due to centrifugal forces.
It seems like the flat earth debate is an age old debate and that people like Captain James Cook try to circumnavigate Antarctica with out successes. Are there any documented cases where people sail east or west along the equator( ball earth) and encounter the ice wall that surrounds the earth according to the FE theory?
I read through your Q&A section but could not see the answer to my question. If it is in the Q&A section please point my to it.
Chris
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Good day ,
I am new to your forum and find it very interesting. I always ask myself, since I was 16 years old, questions like if the earth spins so fast why don't we fly off the surface of earth due to centrifugal forces.
It seems like the flat earth debate is an age old debate and that people like Captain James Cook try to circumnavigate Antarctica with out successes. Are there any documented cases where people sail east or west along the equator( ball earth) and encounter the ice wall that surrounds the earth according to the FE theory?
I read through your Q&A section but could not see the answer to my question. If it is in the Q&A section please point my to it.
Chris
We don't "fly off" because the force of gravity is far stronger than the centrifugal force. You do weigh slightly less at the equator though.
No one has encountered an ice wall.
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Get on a merry-go-round at the nearest playground, and spin it only 1 revolution per day and see if you fly off. I wager you wouldn't even notice it was spinning. To be fair, the centrifugal force is bigger due to the bigger size of the earth - you can get the same acceleration if you make it so that the merry-go-round spins one revolution every 13 seconds or so. Then consider that it's exactly countered by gravity and what you're trying to detect is that you weight slightly less or more.
Note that you can in fact measure the difference in weight of objects based on latitude, so the effect is real - it's just so very very tiny compared to gravity that you can't perceive it without sensitive equipment.
https://www.pharmamanufacturing.com/articles/2016/mass-measurement-precision-small-objects-pharmaceutical-production/
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Hi douglips & StinkyOne, thank you for your reply. The centrifugal force is not my problem, this is something I pondered enough when I was young.
Since this FE topic is coming a long way and the theory of the ice ring or wall, logic tells me that sailors who explored the oceans in the past must have documented their encounters with the ice ring when they sailed along the equator of the ball earth. There must be archives with this information somewhere.
I see that people do all sorts of experiments to prove the flat earth, some of these experiments are really interesting and this is why I want to find out more about the topic.
I think to prove that the ice ring/ wall really exist is a small step in the right direction. This is something that should easily be observed, because if you travel south on the ball globe you reach Antarctica. You should reach the ice ring when you sail or fly along the equator on the ball globe or parallel with the equator,lets say directly from Australia to Chile. What I find is that no one seems to be able to get solid prove of this , but rather try to make assumptions on what the earth should look like from very high up in the atmosphere.
I will appreciate it if one of the moderators of this forum could respond to my question or point me to any information with actual documented information on this.( English is not my first language and if my question is not understandable please ask me to rephrase it)
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I think to prove that the ice ring/ wall really exist is a small step in the right direction. This is something that should easily be observed, because if you travel south on the ball globe you reach Antarctica. You should reach the ice ring when you sail or fly along the equator on the ball globe or parallel with the equator,lets say directly from Australia to Chile. What I find is that no one seems to be able to get solid prove of this , but rather try to make assumptions on what the earth should look like from very high up in the atmosphere.
Unless I'm mistaken, the so-called "latitude" lines are in reality concentric circles. You could never reach the ice wall along the equator because they don't intersect.
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doohicky52, I agree 100% with you if you plot the equator on a Flat Earth chart. The equator forms a circle and you will never encounter the ice ring that surrounds the earth.
See the attached chart for the Ball Earth. If you follow the equator on the ball earth it forms a line as indicated in red all around the earth or the Tropic of Capricorn in white. If you travel from the eastern side of Australia in the direction of the arrow, on the right side of the chart, you should end up at the western side of Chile, from the direction the arrow on the left side of the chart indicates. You will have to confirm it on an actual ball earth.
If you travel the same route on the flat earth you will encounter the ice ring that is suppose to surround the earth. The ice ring will be on the eastern side of Australia and on the western side of Chile.