Editing 2761: 1-to-1 Scale
Warning: You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you log in or create an account, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
The edit can be undone.
Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then save the changes below to finish undoing the edit.
Latest revision | Your text | ||
Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
==Explanation== | ==Explanation== | ||
+ | {{incomplete|Created by a DISPLAY THAT SUPPORTS THE PLANETS WITH NO CROPPING - Please change this comment when editing this page. Do NOT delete this tag too soon.}} | ||
− | + | This comic supposedly shows what each planet would look like at 1:1 scale, which would mean at real size. However, because a minuscule portion of each planet is visible on the page at that scale, it becomes comically useless at distinguishing the size or relative size of each planet, and each planet is just a differently textured straight line. | |
− | + | To understand the diagram, imagine that all eight planets have been drawn close to each other with just a tiny spot of the sky visible between them. The planets have been drawn so it is possible in this small 1:1 image to see all eight planets edges. Space is the black polygon in the center, with Earth the top white segment. The reason why each planet is so smooth is because it's such a small area of each planet: you're only seeing a couple of square inches of the surface of each of the planets, and even though they are all round, the curvature would be invisible on this scale. The four Gas giants are completely flat, whereas the four rocky planets display features, most notably on Earth where grass is visible. | |
− | + | That it cannot have been an image of the real planets aligning, is clear as Mercury is in front of all the large planets, but they are shown with Jupiter possibly furthest in, with the clear exception of the Earth, so those four would be seen from the outside of the Solar System, whereas Mercury in front would only work if seen from the Sun and out.<!-- This explanation doesn't account for possibly being nearside/farside of the Sun, from any extrasolar viewpoint. There are other reasons to believe thatveven *this* is impossible, but it's a far more complex logical debunking and I can't phrase it succinctly, right now... --> Also the idea is that they are placed right next to each other for scale. In the title text it is clear that this is just a small part of a larger drawing, so this is not an image taking from far away. | |
− | The | + | The title text remarks that it is hard to find a display that supports a version of the image without cropping. This is because a true 1:1 scale image showing each of the planets would be ridiculously large[https://solarsystem.nasa.gov/news/1164/how-big-is-the-solar-system/], larger than any monitor or display currently available on Earth (since it would be much larger than Earth, in fact it would would have to be larger than Jupiter, to depict 1:1). |
− | + | ==Transcript== | |
+ | {{incomplete transcript|The main panel itself is missing explanation. Do NOT delete this tag too soon.}} | ||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
:[A frame with a central area of black 'space', bounded at various intersecting angles by eight 'straight lines' representing planetary surfaces, originating from various out-of-frame angles of 'down' and the white of some bodies obscuring some part of the others.] | :[A frame with a central area of black 'space', bounded at various intersecting angles by eight 'straight lines' representing planetary surfaces, originating from various out-of-frame angles of 'down' and the white of some bodies obscuring some part of the others.] | ||
:[There are labels indicating which line represents each planet.] | :[There are labels indicating which line represents each planet.] | ||
:[The four gas-giants' lines are simply drawn, near straight and featureless.] | :[The four gas-giants' lines are simply drawn, near straight and featureless.] | ||
:[The lines for the rocky inner-planets have variations to them, stereotypical of some part of their surface.] | :[The lines for the rocky inner-planets have variations to them, stereotypical of some part of their surface.] | ||
− | :[The "Earth" line ('down' being out the top of the frame) has a profile indicating various small-scale vegetation and also features the white | + | :[The "Earth" line ('down' being out the top of the frame) has a profile indicating various small-scale vegetation and also features the white sillouette of an ant that may be of a realistic size for your display.] |
:[Caption below the panel:] | :[Caption below the panel:] | ||
:The solar system's planets at 1:1 scale | :The solar system's planets at 1:1 scale |