• @[email protected]
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    7
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    2 hours ago

    Instead of making me think about space, the solar system or the universe… this just gives me an existential crisis, visualising how few weeks are actually in a year and how brief a lifetime actually is.

    Then I try to think about space instead.

    • @[email protected]
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      145 hours ago

      Or it was overcast on those days. 46/52 is far better than you’d be able to manage in my area.

  • @Eatspancakes84
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    14 hours ago

    Which planet were these pictures taken on? On my planet the sun looks much bigger.

  • @[email protected]
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    109 hours ago

    You know you spend way too much time on the internet. When your first though at seeing the top of the loop is that it’s going to be a penis made out of the sun moving around.

  • @ace_garp
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    710 hours ago

    Nnnnnnggggg!!

    This is highly infuriating! The sun keeps narrowly missing taking out the church spire.

  • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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    3215 hours ago

    This is what early astronomers thought the orbit was. They believed the earth to be the center of the universe, and couldn’t explain the strange orbits of the stars and planets.

      • Fuck spez
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        1413 hours ago

        Ridiculous. Clearly it’s turtles all the way down.

        • Rose Thorne(She/Her)
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          311 hours ago

          Just the one turtle. Well, at least per world. I guess two, it you drop off the edge while they’re mating.

          And there’s four elephants down there, too.

          • @sudo42
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            110 hours ago

            Wait. Is that one turtle per dimension, one turtle per universe, or one turtle that lives inside each black hole that’s really just a wormhole to another dimension/universe?

  • @iAvicenna
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    812 hours ago

    so clearly sun rotates around earth, in your face Galileo - Church probably

  • @sudo42
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    310 hours ago

    So can someone who is more familiar with this subject answer, “Are these pictures taken at the same time of day with or without seasonal adjustments to time (Daylight Savings Time, etc.)?”

    I understand why the sun would move vertically over the year due to the tilt of the Earth, but what causes the horizontal movement?

    • @[email protected]
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      1210 hours ago

      The Earth’s orbit is an ellipse, not a circle, and therefore the Earth speeds up or slows down depending on where on its orbit it is at the time. In turn this means that the duration of the solar day fluctuates from day to day, from a bit under 24h to a bit over 24h and back.

      So if you take a picture every 24h precisely the sun will appear to move horizontally a little bit on top of the expected vertical movement.

      • @sudo42
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        310 hours ago

        The Earth’s orbit is an ellipse, not a circle, and therefore the Earth speeds up or slows down depending on where on its orbit it is at the time

        That’s it! Thank you.

  • @over_clox
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    614 hours ago

    Neat. I naturally assume the very few apparent gaps are due to bad/cloudy weather on those particular days…

    • @d00ery
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      313 hours ago

      There should be 52 suns in the picture

      • @over_clox
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        413 hours ago

        Yes, that’s exactly my point. I counted 46.

        You can’t expect clear skies every day/week of the year can you?