(COMMENT)I found it interesting, primarily because the things are too fast to see with the naked eye. You would think someone trying to fake it would make the damn things more obvious.
tecoyah, et al,
I would suspect that it is some sort of refection from something that happens on a scheduled basis.
(COMMENT)
No matter what the shape of an object, something that moves that fast across the sky (in the air) makes a sonic boom. It must be pushing air and creating a lot of heat.
So, it is unlikely that what is observed is actually a physical object in the air at the location it appears to be. It would most likely be something moving much, much slower, but because the like is refracted, the reflects appear to be moving very fast. I would imagine the phenomenon will change over time as the angle of the Sun changes.
Just My Thought,
R
(COMMENT)You're not considering size. the smaller somthing is, the slower it needs to go in order to become invisible. You're also wrong about sonic booms (with the right shape, it can be prevented) and if it is alien, it could have an acoustic cloak.
David, et al,
i respectfully disagree.
(COMMENT)
The size has to be something fairly large. The video did not give us a range, however, it suggests that it is quite some distance away; yet leaves a footprint on the image moving at a frame rate faster than the eye can catch, but slow enough to be captured with electronic-optical sensors. We are lead to believe it is not the size of a fly at tens of feet away, but something large enough to be seen by just adjusting the speed of the replay (recording) at some distance (thousands of fett to several miles) using COTS, standard grade devices. It is large enough to be seen at some distance without much telescopic enhancement. It was claimed to be detected by accident. So it has some size to it; the exact size is unknown because the range is unknown.
Any object displaces air (it is a fluid). No matter what you wrap an object in, it still displaces air. In order for it not to leave an air current, it has to be smaller than the air and water molecules in the atmosphere. Even lightening, a flow of electrons, disrupts the atmosphere and makes a sound. We call it thunder.
No, there is no acoustic shield at that speed.
Most Respectfully,
R
David, et al,
i respectfully disagree.
(COMMENT)
The size has to be something fairly large. The video did not give us a range, however, it suggests that it is quite some distance away; yet leaves a footprint on the image moving at a frame rate faster than the eye can catch, but slow enough to be captured with electronic-optical sensors. We are lead to believe it is not the size of a fly at tens of feet away, but something large enough to be seen by just adjusting the speed of the replay (recording) at some distance (thousands of feet to several miles) using COTS, standard grade devices. It is large enough to be seen at some distance without much telescopic enhancement. It was claimed to be detected by accident. So it has some size to it; the exact size is unknown because the range is unknown.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/01/080109104244.htm
Any object displaces air (it is a fluid). No matter what you wrap around an object, it still displaces air. In order for it not to leave turbulence in the air, it has to be smaller than the air and water molecules in the atmosphere (radiation size; but even most radiation leaves a trail). Even lightening, a flow of electrons (1843 times smaller than an atom), disrupts the atmosphere and makes a sound. We call it thunder.
No, there is no acoustic shield at that speed. Acoustic shields can dampen sound on the inside of an enclosed object, but not on the outside exposed surface. The shape can change the frequency of the sound wave; but non-spherical objects that abruptly change directions cannot suppress all frequencies and audible harmonics will be detected (heard).
Most Respectfully,
R
I'll give you the size thing but air can be deflected in a way that won't produce a sonic boom (it's why supersonic passenger plans are about to make a come back). And I said acoustic cloak, not shield. Air waves can, like any other wave, be wrapped around an object by a cloaking device thus allowing it to flow uninterrupted. In the same way a light cloak thus renders an object invisible, an acoustic cloak prevents the creations of acoustic wave which means no sound. The Japanese are currently working on a variant that can cloak earthquakes.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/01/080109104244.htm
Invisibility cloaks work by bending light waves in ways that would not normally be possible, through the use of man-made materials called metamaterials. This cloak uses many of the same principles to bend sound waves, so a ship made of this material would render sonar useless, because the sound waves would not bounce back.
SOURCE: http://www.popsci.com/technology/ar...hips-sonar-design-better-concert-halls?cmp=tw
(COMMENT)Someone should really just try to get closer to the thing and see what it actually is. Not nearly enough evidence to claim it is a UFO.
Not nearly enough evidence to claim it is a UFO.
If it's not a UFO, what is it? You know what UFO is the initialism of, yes?![]()
We don't even know that it is a flying object. It could be an effect of light as Rocco pointed out. Also there is a difference between flying and being blown in the air. Leaves do not fly.
Unidentified Floating Object is still a UFO.Still, you meant alien when you said UFO before and in the context of your intent, you are correct.
UFO generally stands for unidentified flying object, not floating (I've never heard that use of it). Either way, the thing isn't necessarily floating either.