2/21/2024 0 Comments Flat earth society memeWrites the hole is “unseeable” because “light follows the curvature of the torus.” But Dr. A torus-shaped planet would also create a donut-shaped shadow, rather than the round shadows Earthlings have documented for centuries.Īnother, more obvious problem with Donut Earth Theory is that anyone inside the ring would be able to look up and see the other side, according to Dr. The second is the shape of the Earth’s shadow during an eclipse. The wind would be so strong that violent weather would make life on torus Earth very difficult. The sun would also hit the planet more unevenly than we see on Earth, meaning the seasons would vary wildly depending on the donut’s angle in relation to the sun. (VICE reached out to Dinosaur Neil and others who seem to take the idea seriously to ask why and didn't hear back.) A torus wouldn’t have night and day, nor sunrises and sunsets as we know them on our spherical world with a 24-hour rotation, says Dr. Boyajian, adds that Varaug fails to create consistent terms to talk about the hypothesis, a vital step in the scientific process.Įven given the benefit of the doubt, Donut Earth Theory doesn't hold up to basic scientific interrogation. “It starts off as, ‘Hey, how about this?’ And then they try and explain things.” Tyler Ellis, a graduate student assisting Dr. Tabetha Boyajian, one the astrophysicists who identified a phenomenon in another solar system that the media speculated was an alien megastructure, told VICE. Donut Earth Theory, at its most basic, “doesn't start off with a question that we need to answer,” Dr. I have been promoting it for a long time but nobody ever seems to back me up. One user named Dinosaur Neil wrote, “I am glad to see other supporters of toroidal earth theory here. YouTube explainers and theoretical models of a torus Earth exploded in 2016, when some Flat Earth Society users rediscovered the thread. Varaug’s ideas have resurged sporadically over the years. According to the theory, there’s a huge hole in the center of the planet that we can’t see because, Varaug writes, “Light bends and follows the curvature of the torus, making the hole ‘unseeable.’” The theory raises a lot of questions about how gravity would work, which Varaug explains with a sugary, not completely cogent metaphor.
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