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Outside the atmosphere the sun radiates about 1.3kW/m^2, whereas at the earth's surface this power dissipates to about 1 kW/m^2.
originally posted by: ignorant_ape
a reply to: cooperton
the simplest argument against this idiocy - the sun is a star
originally posted by: eriktheawful
So....what? Every image we've seen from Hubble (which is above the atmosphere), is what? A fabrication?
Same for all the probes we've sent out at that use stars for navigation to get to where they are going?
originally posted by: tothetenthpower
a reply to: cooperton
Outside the atmosphere the sun radiates about 1.3kW/m^2, whereas at the earth's surface this power dissipates to about 1 kW/m^2.
Would that not prove the 'lens' effect of the atmosphere then? And why they would be invisible from space, due to the off set, intense glow of the sun in our immediate vicinity?
~Tenth
originally posted by: onebigmonkey
A collection of Apollo astronaut quotes about stars:
onebigmonkey.comoj.com...
originally posted by: ignorant_ape
a reply to: cooperton
the simplest argument against this idiocy - the sun is a star
then the stars would become visible when it became "night" on the moon,