So it turns out that the horizon does not always “rise to eye level“ as you gain altitude as this video shows. In fact it does not even do this on a hypothetical flat earth.
This is video of a flight from LA to frankfurt. The aircraft is at 35000 feet or high most of the way.
On a sphere earth of radius 6370km at this height the horizon is 365km away and down at an angle of 3.3 degrees.
Now on a flat earth there is no reason for there to be a horizon at all. But there is one and lets assume that it is also at 365km away (caused by what ever magic the reality challenged what to make up). T
...he horizon is at ground level and the plane is at . So obviously you have to look down at some angle to see the horizon. Trig tells me that the angle A is described by Tan A = 10.5/365. With A thus being 1.6 degrees.
So is the horizon dipped by 3.3 degrees or only by 1.6 degrees in this video?
Original footage is from Cloud Surfing channelShow more