@Nonlin_Org The existence of spherical rotating planets in our solar system is an objective fact known for centuries, yet some sub-humans still somehow doubt that
@rahimfaid1@ioandtitan@PPLwatcher215@SamSon23311320@haprho 1. Again, the angle your claim the scooe is at is WAY too low. He's pointed correctly on the ISS
2. The only way he can get a 12 second video of the ISS in frame is by tracking it manually, which he does. Otherwise, the ISS would zip through the FOV within 1 second
@rahimfaid1@ioandtitan@PPLwatcher215@SamSon23311320@haprho It isn't. I know from experience that telescopes can actually be aimed much higher than how a camera at a distance will make it look. Like I said, hes tracking the ISS manually, moving the scooe around to keep the ISS in frame as much as possible, then aligning the video frames
@rahimfaid1@ioandtitan@PPLwatcher215@SamSon23311320@haprho Not if you understand how this works at all. With ISS pics you can either wait for it to pass through the frame (which is easier), or track it manually and hope it ends up on the sensor. Then just align all the video frames. The dude in the video did the 2nd option
@rahimfaid1@ioandtitan@PPLwatcher215@SamSon23311320@haprho Ya, its not overly difficult. The ISS is about the same size in the sky as Jupiter, so if you can resolve that (which most telescopes can), then you can resolve the ISS.
Its speed is also slower than you think: its about 1 degree per second on average
@zZzzwfz There is only 1 sun in existence, retard, and humans will never he capable of correctly simulating it. Your deliberate ignorance does not change reality