Hello,
my name is Eva and
this is the most correct Flat Earth model I can imagine
and it took me lots of time and effort but it was also great fun creating it.
First of all,
I put the diameter of this earth model to 40'000km
and the rest into scale.
Then I put in an imaginary line perpendicular to the northpole
and an imaginary circle to the equator.
 
It is also the same line,
I let the sun and moon run along for this example, just a little higher.
According to the Flat Earth Wiki,
the Sun has a diameter of 32 miles (52km)
and is located approximately 3000 miles (5000km)
above the surface of earth' disk.
Here from the equator
I can see a wonderful example of sunrise
and sunset on our flat earth.
Note how pitch black the night becomes,
around me and in any hight above me,
like for planes, weather balloons
or even the moon, when the sun moves away.
The sun has the speed of 1 lap per day as is commonly known.
The moon has to be a bit slower,
so that we can see a solar eclypse
every now and then.
I added just a fixed starfield dome,
because I couldn't figure out a reason,
how the stars rotate in a different direction,
by crossing the equator line,
without thinking of an additional dimension.
I now changed location to the north pole
(at 1km hight),
looking at a substitute of the highest mountain of the world
with 8.8km (hight) in a distance of 5km.
By the way,
have you ever seen such a beautiful halfmoon solar eclipse?
It's only possible,
when either the moon gets its light from a different light source than the Sun
or
is self illuminated.
And that must be true,
because,
if the moon was lit by the sun,
the other side of the earth at night in the same distance
must be lit, too
- even more if the sun is like a spotlight.
Well, let's move the camera up to an altitude of 11 kilometers, where airliners are flying
and have a trip to the south
while observing the sun.
Please note
that she never seems to drop below my sightline at night
and only becomes smaller and smaller
instead of touching the horizon
like she normally does every sunset.
Here we just crossed the equator.
So as I wanted to get a look
at a nice sunset from of a planes altitude,
as I expect it from my own observations,
I tried a little tweak here.
[error message sound]
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