11-08-2024, 01:03 PM
This post was last modified 11-08-2024, 01:23 PM by IdeomotorPrisoner. 
It's a perspective thing.
First thing, while I have never been to The Sistine Chapel, I'm pretty sure I can see the entire dome anywhere in the room. Just from a different angle. That would be pretty trippy architecture to be able hide parts of the painting from different sides of the room with a level surface. You'd need a convexed not a concaved ceiling.
That's a challenge. Create the convex flat earth model to incorporate hemispheric lines of site and orbital precession.
It can't be dome.
That is a weird show...
Second way its perspecive is Andromeda is only 42% larger, so relative in size to us. Both THEIR inhabitants are allowed to feel superior over others like a Magellanic Cloud or a Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy.
But there's also a list of galaxies at least 7 times bigger than the Milky Way.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_...t_galaxies
First thing, while I have never been to The Sistine Chapel, I'm pretty sure I can see the entire dome anywhere in the room. Just from a different angle. That would be pretty trippy architecture to be able hide parts of the painting from different sides of the room with a level surface. You'd need a convexed not a concaved ceiling.
That's a challenge. Create the convex flat earth model to incorporate hemispheric lines of site and orbital precession.
It can't be dome.
That is a weird show...
Second way its perspecive is Andromeda is only 42% larger, so relative in size to us. Both THEIR inhabitants are allowed to feel superior over others like a Magellanic Cloud or a Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy.
But there's also a list of galaxies at least 7 times bigger than the Milky Way.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_...t_galaxies