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#21
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nice catch re my typo -- but it would have to be a an interesting
tower to be seen from 75 miles with unaided vision. You'd have trouble resolving an ordinary building at that range On Jan 1, 8:37 pm, WingFlaps wrote: On Jan 2, 11:19 am, Mxsmanic wrote: Tina writes: Gee, wrong again. I haven't run the numbers, there may be a line of sight, but the only way a human pilot would see a tower top under these conditions is at night if it had a bright flashing light on top of it. Real eyeballs in the daytime would not be able to see it, even if it was in the line of sight. An object 1000 feet in size would be visible from about 1100 nm away, under ideal conditions. A flashing light could be visible from any distance, depending on its brightness. I _did_ run the numbers. Nonsense. If the observer were at 1000' the top of a 1000' tower would be visible ~75 miles away. A flashing light would not be visible from "any distance". Think about it -what if it were on the other side of the planet! Cheers MC |
#22
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Tina writes:
You can be fairly sure he used someone else's equations for line of sight. I'd bet a significant sum he could not derive them himself. He and Euclid would not have gotten along. It's just simple trig. In fact, it's just solving for different sides of a right triangle, as should be obvious from the description I gave. |
#23
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prove it.
show your work On Jan 1, 8:53 pm, Mxsmanic wrote: Tina writes: You can be fairly sure he used someone else's equations for line of sight. I'd bet a significant sum he could not derive them himself. He and Euclid would not have gotten along. It's just simple trig. In fact, it's just solving for different sides of a right triangle, as should be obvious from the description I gave. |
#24
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Mxsmanic wrote:
Ron Wanttaja writes: The International Space Station *isn't* in outer space? Better tell NASA.... They already know, since they have to boost it periodically in order to compensate for drag from the atmosphere. Correct answer to the wrong question. The International Space Station orbits at about 400 km; the official definition of outer space is 100 km. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#25
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Mxsmanic wrote:
writes: Yeah, maybe an object 1000 feet in diameter but not a tower 1000 feet tall and 3 to 6 feet wide dipwad. There are few thousand-foot towers that are only a metre wide. Not at the bottom, but there are few towers that are more than a meter or so wide at the top, which is the part one would see at a distance dipwad. Also towers are not solid, they are a skeleton frame work, so what you have to see at a distance is tubing on the order of a couple of inches in diameter. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#26
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Mxsmanic wrote:
Tina writes: You can be fairly sure he used someone else's equations for line of sight. I'd bet a significant sum he could not derive them himself. He and Euclid would not have gotten along. It's just simple trig. In fact, it's just solving for different sides of a right triangle, as should be obvious from the description I gave. Wrong; the optical line of sight is different than the geometric line of sight because the atmosphere bends light. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#27
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Mxsmanic wrote in
: Tina writes: You can be fairly sure he used someone else's equations for line of sight. I'd bet a significant sum he could not derive them himself. He and Euclid would not have gotten along. It's just simple trig. In fact, it's just solving for different sides of a right triangle, as should be obvious from the description I gave. Nope Bertie |
#28
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On Wed, 02 Jan 2008 02:52:09 +0100, Mxsmanic wrote:
Ron Wanttaja writes: The International Space Station *isn't* in outer space? Better tell NASA.... They already know, since they have to boost it periodically in order to compensate for drag from the atmosphere. Hay-el, if you use that as a criteria, the Shuttle doesn't go into outer space, either. You get measurable atmospheric drag out to 1000 km or more. The internationally-agreed boundary for space starts is at 100 km. Ron Wanttaja |
#29
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#30
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Mxsmanic wrote in
: Tina writes: Gee, wrong again. I haven't run the numbers, there may be a line of sight, but the only way a human pilot would see a tower top under these conditions is at night if it had a bright flashing light on top of it. Real eyeballs in the daytime would not be able to see it, even if it was in the line of sight. An object 1000 feet in size would be visible from about 1100 nm away, under ideal conditions. A flashing light could be visible from any distance, depending on its brightness. I _did_ run the numbers. Nope, you're an idiot Bertie |
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