Ah, I had thought you were talking about the precession.
Yeah, the earth is tilted 23.5 degrees from the plane of its orbit around the sun. That's why summer in the Northern hemisphere is winter I'm the Southern hemisphere, and vice versa.
Regarding Polaris appearing in the same location, the average distance between the Earth and the Sun is 94 Million miles. So the diameter of the Earth's orbit is 2x that, so on average 188 Million miles. The distance to Polaris is 434 light-years, or 2.551x10^15 miles. So you create an isosceles triangle with the base being the diameter of the Earth's orbit and the height being the distance to Polaris and calculate the angles of the corners of the triangle. tan^-1 (2.551x10^15 miles / 94,000,000 miles) = 89.999997889 degrees.
You end up with a triangle that has 2 corners (at either side of Earth's orbit) that are 89.999997889 degrees and one corner (at Polaris) that's 0.000004223 degrees. Since the angles at each end of Earth's orbit are nearly 90 degrees, Polaris appears to not move in the sky, although it does a very small amount that's almost imperceptible.
The irony of questioning my integrity when your response to being destroyed in an argument is to call the opposition liers cause you cant follow the math. Projection? Check yourself mate
Ah, I had thought you were talking about the precession.
Yeah, the earth is tilted 23.5 degrees from the plane of its orbit around the sun. That's why summer in the Northern hemisphere is winter I'm the Southern hemisphere, and vice versa.
Regarding Polaris appearing in the same location, the average distance between the Earth and the Sun is 94 Million miles. So the diameter of the Earth's orbit is 2x that, so on average 188 Million miles. The distance to Polaris is 434 light-years, or 2.551x10^15 miles. So you create an isosceles triangle with the base being the diameter of the Earth's orbit and the height being the distance to Polaris and calculate the angles of the corners of the triangle. tan^-1 (2.551x10^15 miles / 94,000,000 miles) = 89.999997889 degrees.
You end up with a triangle that has 2 corners (at either side of Earth's orbit) that are 89.999997889 degrees and one corner (at Polaris) that's 0.000004223 degrees. Since the angles at each end of Earth's orbit are nearly 90 degrees, Polaris appears to not move in the sky, although it does a very small amount that's almost imperceptible.
BeerMan FTW! 👍🍻
Lol you'll keep waiting, and we'll be waiting for you to grow another braincell to share the load with your other one
The irony of questioning my integrity when your response to being destroyed in an argument is to call the opposition liers cause you cant follow the math. Projection? Check yourself mate