Correct. The way refraction works is that photons scatter. This means that an object that is viewed from a distance would have its photon scatter. The photons that are originating from the bottom of the object would naturally scatter into the ground before the photons at the top. The photons that scatter into the ground are then absorbed or obstructed by the ground. Therefore they never make it to the line of sight of the observer. This gives the illusion that an object is disappearing from the bottom up.
I gave you multiple experiments that can prove this is how refraction works. All experiments that deal with refraction prove that this is how refraction works.
Wherever does there exist an experiment you can do to show how the photons from the bottom of an object would bend upward to prevent a curved horizon from obstructing it.
[ - ] Theo 0 points 9 monthsJul 31, 2024 00:39:10 ago (+0/-0)
No, that's not the way that refraction works, and refraction may not be what is causing the light to travel in a curved path, and you have not given me multiple experiments that can prove scattering.
Refraction works because photons are scattering. When they are scattering through A dense medium, there are more particles the interrupt the photons path and scatter them. Scattering means that they all move away from each other. This would mean that an object would have photons, scattering, upwards and downwards. The parts of an object that are closer to the ground will have its light particles come in contact with the ground first. These photons never make it to the observer's eye giving the illusion that the object is being obstructed from the bottom up. This is repeatable. It is exactly how refraction works.
I do an experiment that can prove it. All you need is two rooms in a camera.
[ + ] Panic
[ - ] Panic 2 points 9 monthsJul 29, 2024 22:29:53 ago (+2/-0)
[ + ] i_scream_trucks
[ - ] i_scream_trucks 2 points 9 monthsJul 30, 2024 06:02:07 ago (+2/-0)
[ + ] McNasty
[ - ] McNasty [op] 0 points 9 monthsJul 30, 2024 09:00:53 ago (+0/-0)
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[ + ] Theo
[ - ] Theo 1 point 9 monthsJul 30, 2024 04:06:44 ago (+1/-0)
[ + ] McNasty
[ - ] McNasty [op] 0 points 9 monthsJul 30, 2024 09:02:42 ago (+0/-0)
I gave you multiple experiments that can prove this is how refraction works. All experiments that deal with refraction prove that this is how refraction works.
Wherever does there exist an experiment you can do to show how the photons from the bottom of an object would bend upward to prevent a curved horizon from obstructing it.
[ + ] Deleted
[ - ] deleted 0 points 9 monthsJul 30, 2024 22:20:36 ago (+0/-0)
[ + ] Theo
[ - ] Theo 0 points 9 monthsJul 31, 2024 00:39:10 ago (+0/-0)
[ + ] McNasty
[ - ] McNasty [op] 0 points 9 monthsJul 31, 2024 00:41:36 ago (+0/-0)
I do an experiment that can prove it. All you need is two rooms in a camera.
https://youtu.be/YG40kkbh734?si=ODbCtisufrn4yP3s
[ + ] Theo
[ - ] Theo 1 point 9 monthsJul 31, 2024 01:29:34 ago (+1/-0)
[ + ] McNasty
[ - ] McNasty [op] 0 points 9 monthsJul 31, 2024 01:36:17 ago (+0/-0)
[ + ] Theo
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