Clockwise vs counter clockwise star rotation
https://youtube.com/shorts/Lz_2_heQv0o?si=xfWKDO7mjEtaFZ-V
https://youtu.be/C-ZF_7JetwQ?si=R5LnjZigTg5YyUXI
One is the clockwise rotation of the Orion constellation (one the most famous one and easy to see) why does it rotate clockwise in one hemisphere and counterclockwise on the other?
How can this be on a flat earth?
Galaxy Art Media
YouTube
Orion Constellation Time Lapse #shorts
#shorts Video Time lapse with the Orion Orion Constellation from March 2021
Nikon D7200
Samyang 14mm Premium
=============================
Social:
=============================
https://galaxyartmedia.com/
https://www.instagram.com/galaxy_art_media/
https://www.facebook.com/galaxyartmedia
https://twitter.com/GalaxyArtMedia
=====================...
EdgelessExpanse
YouTube
Time lapse of the Orion Constellation from the Southern Hemisphere
http://www.cliffsenkbeil.com My first attempt to capture a time lapse of a star constellation. The Orion constellation is seen here upside down from the southern hemisphere relative to observers from the northern hemisphere. In this time lapse footage you can clearly see the constellation move due to the rotation of the Earth (and early on a sat...
2 Replies
clockwise and counter clockwise are relative directions.
If you look north , walk backwards as far south as you want. they don't magically change directions.
They only change directions when you face a different direction.
There are some interesting fe explanations but ultimately we can't know for sure. Although I'd argue, this is a non-sequitar. If we can measure the ground to be flat, it doesn't matter what the stars or sun does over our head. The earth would be flat regardless. Which of course, I believe has been shown.