Ask Ethan: How Do We Know The Earth Isn’t Flat? (Synopsis) [Starts With A Bang]


“A long time ago people believed that the world is flat and the moon is made of green cheese. Some still do, to this day. The man on the moon is looking down and laughing.” -Vera Nazarian

When people make claims that are patently untrue — like the Earth is flat — perhaps your knee-jerk reaction is to ridicule them. If you dig a little deeper, however, you’ll likely discover a truth about your own past: that you once held views that flew in the face of the scientific evidence, only you weren’t aware of it at the time.

During the partial phases of a lunar eclipse, the shadow of Earth can be seen on the surface of the Moon, indicating quite clearly that it casts a roughly circular shape. Image credit: E. Siegel, with eclipse sequences by Wikimedia Commons users Zaereth and Javier Sánchez.

During the partial phases of a lunar eclipse, the shadow of Earth can be seen on the surface of the Moon, indicating quite clearly that it casts a roughly circular shape. Image credit: E. Siegel, with eclipse sequences by Wikimedia Commons users Zaereth and Javier Sánchez.

Hopefully, you changed your mind. Hopefully, the evidence was what compelled you to do it. And hopefully, if given the opportunity, you’d give that same gift to someone else. If you know someone who has an incorrect idea of how things worked, perhaps you wouldn’t simply tell them the right answer; you’d give them a way to figure it out for themselves.

The two ways Earth could cast a circular shadow on the Moon: by being a spherical object (bottom) or a disk-like object (top). Image credit: Windows to the Universe Original (Randy Russell), under a c.c.a.-s.a.-3.0 unported license.

The two ways Earth could cast a circular shadow on the Moon: by being a spherical object (bottom) or a disk-like object (top). Image credit: Windows to the Universe Original (Randy Russell), under a c.c.a.-s.a.-3.0 unported license.

Here’s how you’d determine not only whether the Earth was flat or not, but how you’d measure its size, using technology we’ve always had.



from ScienceBlogs http://ift.tt/1TLSkgq

“A long time ago people believed that the world is flat and the moon is made of green cheese. Some still do, to this day. The man on the moon is looking down and laughing.” -Vera Nazarian

When people make claims that are patently untrue — like the Earth is flat — perhaps your knee-jerk reaction is to ridicule them. If you dig a little deeper, however, you’ll likely discover a truth about your own past: that you once held views that flew in the face of the scientific evidence, only you weren’t aware of it at the time.

During the partial phases of a lunar eclipse, the shadow of Earth can be seen on the surface of the Moon, indicating quite clearly that it casts a roughly circular shape. Image credit: E. Siegel, with eclipse sequences by Wikimedia Commons users Zaereth and Javier Sánchez.

During the partial phases of a lunar eclipse, the shadow of Earth can be seen on the surface of the Moon, indicating quite clearly that it casts a roughly circular shape. Image credit: E. Siegel, with eclipse sequences by Wikimedia Commons users Zaereth and Javier Sánchez.

Hopefully, you changed your mind. Hopefully, the evidence was what compelled you to do it. And hopefully, if given the opportunity, you’d give that same gift to someone else. If you know someone who has an incorrect idea of how things worked, perhaps you wouldn’t simply tell them the right answer; you’d give them a way to figure it out for themselves.

The two ways Earth could cast a circular shadow on the Moon: by being a spherical object (bottom) or a disk-like object (top). Image credit: Windows to the Universe Original (Randy Russell), under a c.c.a.-s.a.-3.0 unported license.

The two ways Earth could cast a circular shadow on the Moon: by being a spherical object (bottom) or a disk-like object (top). Image credit: Windows to the Universe Original (Randy Russell), under a c.c.a.-s.a.-3.0 unported license.

Here’s how you’d determine not only whether the Earth was flat or not, but how you’d measure its size, using technology we’ve always had.



from ScienceBlogs http://ift.tt/1TLSkgq

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