I would expect that the sun should not appear that much different in brightness of you are very close to the north pole as the sun should remain the same distance relative you.
I notice that most of the northern sunset stuff is from far from the pole. So it is still possible for their to be slight distortion in colour.
This would suggest that if it is the same all throughout the rotation at the pole, that the globe is at least plausible.
If it is changing colours like it does else where...then it must be flat or at least the sun is smaller and closer than we are told
While I like the argument. I need one more test to show why I think may be happening.
What If I get refracted parallel rays which then hit a cloud, which is not evenly distributed and that then also refracts the refracted light. (Layers of clouds)
Ie. Can I make a parallel ray appear like a local light source through a type of lense.
If so, when I take that resulting light source, does it create crepuscular rays?
What about the northern sunset at midnight.
I would expect that the sun should not appear that much different in brightness of you are very close to the north pole as the sun should remain the same distance relative you.
I notice that most of the northern sunset stuff is from far from the pole. So it is still possible for their to be slight distortion in colour.
This would suggest that if it is the same all throughout the rotation at the pole, that the globe is at least plausible.
If it is changing colours like it does else where...then it must be flat or at least the sun is smaller and closer than we are told
While I like the argument. I need one more test to show why I think may be happening.
What If I get refracted parallel rays which then hit a cloud, which is not evenly distributed and that then also refracts the refracted light. (Layers of clouds)
Ie. Can I make a parallel ray appear like a local light source through a type of lense.
If so, when I take that resulting light source, does it create crepuscular rays?
Do we see parallel rays more often than crepuscular?
Perhaps there is a way it gets distorted in some angles based on weather conditions