I couldn't find data but it's an odds on bet that Polaris will not be the focus. Paul D any north statr can be the focus for these experiments in illusion physics.. or rather wide angle and let them all be in focus.. Infinity will do wont it. In HC 28 +/- days is correct, and NASA could easily do the experiment. ER er well back in 1969 or so they could have.. lol. And for some reason, perhaps it is the geostationary satellite, I am confident that even here GC will have a problem, because the moon will demonstrate a monthly orbit exactly as claimed with respect to the stars which will put me back well and truly into the realm of the relationship the aether plays in mass motion and inertia physics. Philip. ----- Original Message ----- From: Paul Deema To: Geocentrism@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Friday, November 16, 2007 4:57 PM Subject: [geocentrism] Re: Two spin axes of Earth? Philip M From philip madsen Thu Nov 15 22:17:53 2007 Now there is a thought what star trail would you get if you had a camera on the north pole of the moon, doing its alleged 28 day spin. I haven't checked it carefully but as the Moon is rotating very roughly in 25 hours (geocentric model) and the stars in a little less than 24, I'd say it will be the same as in the heliocentric model where it will be a bit more that 27 days. Important point here though. I couldn't find data but it's an odds on bet that Polaris will not be the focus. Paul D ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Make the switch to the world's best email. Get the new Yahoo!7 Mail now. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG Free Edition. Version: 7.5.503 / Virus Database: 269.15.33/1132 - Release Date: 15/11/2007 9:34 AM