ANOTHER "Mysterious Bubble" formed! "Huge spherical illuminant was seen in the sky" | |
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Anonymous Coward User ID: 1303529 United States 08/25/2011 08:20 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Remember the one seen over Hawaii? (snip) Asterisk board member calvin 737 was the first to suggest it might be related to a Minuteman III missile launch around that time. As more people on the forum dug into it, the timing was found to be right. The missile launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base (in California) at 03:35 Hawaii time, just minutes before the halo was seen. I noticed the stars of Cassiopeia are visible in the webcam, so the view was to the northeast, which is the right direction to see the missile as well. OK, the timing and direction are perfect, so the rocket is clearly the culprit… but how, exactly? One suggestion was that it’s due to the shock wave as the supersonic missile blew through the tenuous upper atmosphere. I’ve heard some rumblings that this might be the cause, but I’m not convinced. I thought shock excitation has to be pretty strong to get air to glow (any experts out there willing to comment?) and the movement of the missile may not be enough for that. Also, in that case I’d expect to see more of a disk pattern than a thin ring, since the missile would be continuously blowing through the (very tenuous) atmosphere. The thin ring indicates to me this was most likely a single, short event. And if you posit the shock wave wasn’t continuous as the missile moved, but instead was generated rapidly and ceased (maybe as the missile pierced some atmospheric layer) I don’t see how a shock wave would create a ring that moves physically across the sky; it would expand away from a single point. Again, this idea doesn’t convince me. [Note: see update below; I realized there may be a little bit more to this idea.] [link to blogs.discovermagazine.com] |
Athena Awakened User ID: 1312743 United States 08/25/2011 08:21 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | There seems to be so much going on in space recently, no telling what it is, but somehow get the sense that something is brewing nearby in the cosmos. "If ever a time should come, when vain and aspiring men shall possess the highest seats in Government, our country will stand in need of its experienced patriots to prevent its ruin.” Samuel Adams, 1776 |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 1328062 United States 08/25/2011 08:27 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
GeekOfTheWeek User ID: 1383040 United States 08/25/2011 08:30 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | It's clearly NOT in the upper atmosphere. It looks near the ground. Both do. To me, it looks like a gravity wave bubble. Like when you turn on an intense gravity altering device... It started in 1995, this : [link to www.thelivingmoon.com] Now we see this same look from the TR-3B when it powers up to leave the area... Now near the ground in flight, this same kind of look??? Hmmmm somethings adding up to nefarious actions!! I love physics. It bonds us eternally, it's what makes our computers work, it's what's in my morning cup of coffee, it's the thing that keeps the universe from vanishing due to lack of belief... |
Plan B (OP) User ID: 1484992 United States 08/25/2011 08:31 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Remember the one seen over Hawaii? Quoting: JustAWoman (snip) Asterisk board member calvin 737 was the first to suggest it might be related to a Minuteman III missile launch around that time. As more people on the forum dug into it, the timing was found to be right. The missile launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base (in California) at 03:35 Hawaii time, just minutes before the halo was seen. I noticed the stars of Cassiopeia are visible in the webcam, so the view was to the northeast, which is the right direction to see the missile as well. OK, the timing and direction are perfect, so the rocket is clearly the culprit… but how, exactly? One suggestion was that it’s due to the shock wave as the supersonic missile blew through the tenuous upper atmosphere. I’ve heard some rumblings that this might be the cause, but I’m not convinced. I thought shock excitation has to be pretty strong to get air to glow (any experts out there willing to comment?) and the movement of the missile may not be enough for that. Also, in that case I’d expect to see more of a disk pattern than a thin ring, since the missile would be continuously blowing through the (very tenuous) atmosphere. The thin ring indicates to me this was most likely a single, short event. And if you posit the shock wave wasn’t continuous as the missile moved, but instead was generated rapidly and ceased (maybe as the missile pierced some atmospheric layer) I don’t see how a shock wave would create a ring that moves physically across the sky; it would expand away from a single point. Again, this idea doesn’t convince me. [Note: see update below; I realized there may be a little bit more to this idea.] [link to blogs.discovermagazine.com] Yes, the missile launch seems to fit with the Hawaii bubble. However, the China bubble is not over water, but "glowing" over the Beijing area. Also, the Hawaii bubble seemed to grow and then dissipate rapidly. The new China bubble expanded over the area for quite a while. More info needed.... |
chuckslik User ID: 1496483 Canada 08/25/2011 08:36 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Remember the one seen over Hawaii? Quoting: JustAWoman (snip) Asterisk board member calvin 737 was the first to suggest it might be related to a Minuteman III missile launch around that time. As more people on the forum dug into it, the timing was found to be right. The missile launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base (in California) at 03:35 Hawaii time, just minutes before the halo was seen. I noticed the stars of Cassiopeia are visible in the webcam, so the view was to the northeast, which is the right direction to see the missile as well. OK, the timing and direction are perfect, so the rocket is clearly the culprit… but how, exactly? One suggestion was that it’s due to the shock wave as the supersonic missile blew through the tenuous upper atmosphere. I’ve heard some rumblings that this might be the cause, but I’m not convinced. I thought shock excitation has to be pretty strong to get air to glow (any experts out there willing to comment?) and the movement of the missile may not be enough for that. Also, in that case I’d expect to see more of a disk pattern than a thin ring, since the missile would be continuously blowing through the (very tenuous) atmosphere. The thin ring indicates to me this was most likely a single, short event. And if you posit the shock wave wasn’t continuous as the missile moved, but instead was generated rapidly and ceased (maybe as the missile pierced some atmospheric layer) I don’t see how a shock wave would create a ring that moves physically across the sky; it would expand away from a single point. Again, this idea doesn’t convince me. [Note: see update below; I realized there may be a little bit more to this idea.] [link to blogs.discovermagazine.com] Yes, the missile launch seems to fit with the Hawaii bubble. However, the China bubble is not over water, but "glowing" over the Beijing area. Also, the Hawaii bubble seemed to grow and then dissipate rapidly. The new China bubble expanded over the area for quite a while. More info needed.... It looks like a release of some sort. The Hawaii bubble seems to grow. Maybe it's a bubble of moisture being blown out of the way. Kinda like blowing a bubble with chewing gum. some drink from the fountain of knowledge, others just gargle |
Plan B (OP) User ID: 1484992 United States 08/25/2011 08:44 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | It's clearly NOT in the upper atmosphere. It looks near the ground. Both do. Quoting: GeekOfTheWeek To me, it looks like a gravity wave bubble. Like when you turn on an intense gravity altering device... It started in 1995, this : [link to www.thelivingmoon.com] Now we see this same look from the TR-3B when it powers up to leave the area... Now near the ground in flight, this same kind of look??? Hmmmm somethings adding up to nefarious actions!! Remember the missile launch off San Diego about a year ago? Remember the cruise ship Splendor loosing all power and needing a tow in? The submarine HMS Astute loosing all power and needing a tow in? Well, "Bezerkers" will tell you those events were part of an EMP type weapon being used, likely by China. Perhaps this is related somehow... |
Plan B (OP) User ID: 1484992 United States 08/25/2011 09:00 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Mysterious bubble cloud sighting in China SNIP - (CNN/CCTV) - Dozens of people spotted an unidentified, glowing object above Shanghai and Beijing at the same time. The giant ball of light appeared Saturday night. A pilot flying from Shanghai to Changchun was the first to post information about the colossal light online. The pilot says the so-called "UFO" grew in size and ended up being about 100 times larger than the moon. He said the sphere slowly faded as it hovered above Shanghai for nearly 20 minutes.... |