I was told the other day that due to the curvature of the earth the furthest you can see is 17 miles, can anyone confirm this?
cheers
Matt
cheers
Matt
Surely not right. I can see Swanage from a beach on the IoW, so that's not due to elevation???Lithril said:I was told the other day that due to the curvature of the earth the furthest you can see is 17 miles, can anyone confirm this?
cheers
Matt
Martyn said:dunno, but I would imagine it depends on your altitude. Perhaps that's 17 miles at sea level?
Also, the earth aint round, it's an elipse, so the value will be different for different points on the surface.
bushtuckerman said:I don't know what the geometry of this is, but if at the beach you should be able to see further than the geometrical distance due to the weird properties of light.
At Dover you can see Calais relatively easily and that's about 15 miles isn't it? so i suspect the actual distance you can see is greater than 17, and it may also depend on the weather?
Wayland said:I knew there was an advantage to being a Viking. My World is flat and I can see all the way to the edge. ....![]()
It's generally accepted that the farthest naked eye object is M31, the Andromeda galaxy which is 2.9 million light years away.[size=-1]SMARTY said:Look to the stars.......How far???????
[size=-1]Oh, and to be really picky, the Earth is a tri-lobed oblate spheroid.[/size][size=-1]Martyn said:[/size]so, the earth aint round, it's an elipse
That comes out as 4.8 Km (3 miles) from eye level to the horizon.Povarian said:As for surface distance due to curvature, check out: http://www.imagiverse.org/resources/howthingswork/horizon/
And that comes out as 4.8 Km too.bushtuckerman said: