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Flat Earth Community / Re: Cassini probe data yeilds wonderful new insights about Saturn
« on: March 24, 2019, 01:34:53 AM »
Happy to hear from at least one person around here!! The ultimate shape of the universe itself is still up in the air, if i may make a poor pun... but so far, no flat objects have been found in it, to my knowledge. Not sure why you would hazard that i am "regurgitating" stuff - i've been interested in astronomy since i was 7, and have viewed the moon and 4 or 5 planets through telescopes of various sizes - they are most definitely spherical and have rings and moons and such around them: this is easy to see using even a backyard telescope.
The Lagrange points are places where the gravitation forces of the sun and the earth interract to enhance orbital stability - the math is a bit complex but it it this extra stability that makes them ideal for placing satellites: if you place a satellite there, it will stay put and not go wandering off. They are not that close to the earth - the one that the Webb telescope is being sent to, is about 1.6 million km way: about 1% of the distance to the sun. There are actually several satellites at Lagrange points now, such as SOHO - a solar observation platform that has also discovered over 3,000 comets. You can easily see SOHO and other satellites at the L! Legrange position, with a decent telescope, and it is VERY easy for anyone to measure how far away it is, using parallax.
The Lagrange points are places where the gravitation forces of the sun and the earth interract to enhance orbital stability - the math is a bit complex but it it this extra stability that makes them ideal for placing satellites: if you place a satellite there, it will stay put and not go wandering off. They are not that close to the earth - the one that the Webb telescope is being sent to, is about 1.6 million km way: about 1% of the distance to the sun. There are actually several satellites at Lagrange points now, such as SOHO - a solar observation platform that has also discovered over 3,000 comets. You can easily see SOHO and other satellites at the L! Legrange position, with a decent telescope, and it is VERY easy for anyone to measure how far away it is, using parallax.