Should be called blimp force, as it is made up off balloons and drones.
Satellite TV and GPS are both ground base for any one wondering.
You can actually bounce radio signals off the firmament, as it seem like it is reflective, like water. You lose a lot of signal strenghet if you do though.
The international space station has been photographed "flying" in front of the moon at incredible speed by amateur photographers. How does it keep circling up there and never run out of fuel? Spherical Earthers can explain it with gravitation.
Never heard of the lasers that can project light/images into the sodium layer? It's called a sodium layer laser guide star adaptive optics system. This system was created in 1997. ISS "launched" in 1998.. it's an artificial projected image into the sodium layer
I understand that, but someone who believes in flat earth wouldn't believe it's orbiting a sphere, but flying in a circle around the sky, which would take fuel. They defeated me, though... by saying it's a hologram.
Should be called blimp force, as it is made up off balloons and drones.
Satellite TV and GPS are both ground base for any one wondering.
You can actually bounce radio signals off the firmament, as it seem like it is reflective, like water. You lose a lot of signal strenghet if you do though.
The international space station has been photographed "flying" in front of the moon at incredible speed by amateur photographers. How does it keep circling up there and never run out of fuel? Spherical Earthers can explain it with gravitation.
Never heard of the lasers that can project light/images into the sodium layer? It's called a sodium layer laser guide star adaptive optics system. This system was created in 1997. ISS "launched" in 1998.. it's an artificial projected image into the sodium layer
I understand that, but someone who believes in flat earth wouldn't believe it's orbiting a sphere, but flying in a circle around the sky, which would take fuel. They defeated me, though... by saying it's a hologram.