It is if it can literally make material glow red hot. Or are you insinuating the glow is reflection, which disproves the very concept of the sun being an object floating over a disk, as is dictated by perspective. Either the sun would be supermassive and far beyond the end of the earth, or it's tiny and cannot cast a reflection like in the image. Both are mutually exclusive, so no matter how you try to worm yourself out of the trap you literally talked yourself into, you've proven your own stance wrong.
You are talking about a bunch of computer generated images of the sun, not reality. The sun is very white and bright these days. as confirmed by the picture in OP. In the 90s the sun used to be yellow, but not anymore.
The sun's color hasn't (well, it has, minutely. Which is exactly how it should be as a star ages.) changed, as can be verified by physical photo prints from those nineties you speak of. Even when the sun isn't in the print, lighting hasn't magically changed in the pictures, friend. If the sun changed colors you'd see drastic differences between your childhood pics and modern ones.
Let me know when you're done grasping at straws. In the meantime, I'm more than entertained by you scraping this barrel of bunk arguments.
https://youtu.be/WwimocU0IIc
You can not even bother to look up the original source before throwing out false accusation. Good one.
Guess what, the the sun is not as hot as you been lead to believe.
It is if it can literally make material glow red hot. Or are you insinuating the glow is reflection, which disproves the very concept of the sun being an object floating over a disk, as is dictated by perspective. Either the sun would be supermassive and far beyond the end of the earth, or it's tiny and cannot cast a reflection like in the image. Both are mutually exclusive, so no matter how you try to worm yourself out of the trap you literally talked yourself into, you've proven your own stance wrong.
You are talking about a bunch of computer generated images of the sun, not reality. The sun is very white and bright these days. as confirmed by the picture in OP. In the 90s the sun used to be yellow, but not anymore.
The sun's color hasn't (well, it has, minutely. Which is exactly how it should be as a star ages.) changed, as can be verified by physical photo prints from those nineties you speak of. Even when the sun isn't in the print, lighting hasn't magically changed in the pictures, friend. If the sun changed colors you'd see drastic differences between your childhood pics and modern ones.
Let me know when you're done grasping at straws. In the meantime, I'm more than entertained by you scraping this barrel of bunk arguments.