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-   -   Meteor Skims Sun's Surface (http://projectavalon.net/forum/showthread.php?t=10973)

brutus35 02-10-2009 12:46 AM

Meteor Skims Sun's Surface
 
Hey,
Did anyone see this amazing video from sky news..Thank Goodness the sun is Huge..:mfr_omg:
http://lightworkers.org/video/66671/...sun-sky-report

Myra 02-10-2009 01:22 AM

Re: Meteor Skims Sun's Surface
 
Okay that's weird. :shocked:

jaby 02-10-2009 01:22 AM

Re: Meteor Skims Sun's Surface
 
I saw this a while back on another forum....and basically no-one could figure out what the hell it was. But what-ever it was it was HUGE!!!

Very strange.

:thumb_yello:

There was actually a heated discussion because the sceptic/spooks were insistant that it was an INSECT !!! flying close to the camera. Which of course meant that it WASN'T...lol.

Brinty 02-10-2009 01:58 AM

Re: Meteor Skims Sun's Surface
 
Hey, let's think about this for a moment . . . . It occurs to me that there are three posibilities:

1. The object was between us and the sun.
2. It was on the other side of the sun.
3. It grazed the sun's atmosphere.

If it was No.3, then the sun's gravitational pull would have either sucked it into the sun, or at least, deflected it in a major way. There doesn't seem to be a measurable deflection, so I figure, rule out No.3.

This leaves either of the other two options.

Now, if it were option No.2, (on the other side of the sun), it must have been travelling at a speed faster than light speed for it to have moved as far as it did in such a short space of time. The sun's diameter is eight hundred, seventy thousand miles (870,000). Light travels one hundred, eighty-six thousand miles (186,000) per second. So, at light speed, the object would have taken roughly four point seven seconds (4.7) to traverse the diameter of the sun.

From what I saw in the video clip, at the speed it was travelling, there was no way it would have taken that long to go that far. So, rule out option No.2.

This leaves only No.1, which I feel is quite feasable. Insect? No, I'd believe it was a flying pig before I'd believe it was an insect.

Dantheman62 02-10-2009 02:06 AM

Re: Meteor Skims Sun's Surface
 
I don't think anything would be able to actually skim off the sun being that temperatures that close would be anywhere from 1 million to 3 or more million degrees. It would be vaporized instantly.

Dantheman62 02-10-2009 02:12 AM

Re: Meteor Skims Sun's Surface
 
Plus that thing would have to be huge to look like that. Like twice the size of earth!

http://projectavalon.net/forum/pictu...pictureid=5388

Dantheman62 02-10-2009 02:17 AM

Re: Meteor Skims Sun's Surface
 
Here's a shot of a comet going towards the sun

http://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/galle...XMAScometA.jpg
This LASCO C2 image from 23 December 1996 shows the "Christmas Comet" (Comet SOHO-6) streaking towards the Sun

Dantheman62 02-10-2009 02:19 AM

Re: Meteor Skims Sun's Surface
 
another comet

http://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/galle...10/NEAT_c3.jpg
Our most breathtaking shots of a comet featured Comet NEAT (C/2002 V1) in the LASCO C3 field-of-view.

Dantheman62 02-10-2009 02:29 AM

Re: Meteor Skims Sun's Surface
 
There's all kinds of comments about it all over the forums, here's a link to AboveTopSecret and all the comments they have about it... http://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread429737/pg2

jaby 02-10-2009 02:33 AM

Re: Meteor Skims Sun's Surface
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Brinty (Post 111119)
Hey, let's think about this for a moment . . . . It occurs to me that there are three posibilities:

1. The object was between us and the sun.
2. It was on the other side of the sun.
3. It grazed the sun's atmosphere.

If it was No.3, then the sun's gravitational pull would have either sucked it into the sun, or at least, deflected it in a major way. There doesn't seem to be a measurable deflection, so I figure, rule out No.3.

This leaves either of the other two options.

Now, if it were option No.2, (on the other side of the sun), it must have been travelling at a speed faster than light speed for it to have moved as far as it did in such a short space of time. The sun's diameter is eight hundred, seventy thousand miles (870,000). Light travels one hundred, eighty-six thousand miles (186,000) per second. So, at light speed, the object would have taken roughly four point seven seconds (4.7) to traverse the diameter of the sun.

From what I saw in the video clip, at the speed it was travelling, there was no way it would have taken that long to go that far. So, rule out option No.2.

This leaves only No.1, which I feel is quite feasable. Insect? No, I'd believe it was a flying pig before I'd believe it was an insect.


The more you get into this video the weirder it gets.

The size speed etc.

Then you even have to start questioning if we know as much about the sun as we think we do.

It just goes on and on....there just doesn't seem to be a satisfactory answer.

Trust me....lol...I've been here before and watched the video countless times.

But it will be interesting if anyone comes up with something.

I surpose a SUPER-DUPER MEGA-HUGE....FASTER than the speed of light meteor is one option. Or ET craft touching into the physical dimension for a tiny moment.

Oh no! I'm at it again. This video really gets to you.....:lol3:

Dantheman62 02-10-2009 02:55 AM

Re: Meteor Skims Sun's Surface
 
HaHa jaby, yeah it is a cool video! and I see all kinds of answers out there but nothing that says 'hey that's it!'

Mercuriel 02-10-2009 08:17 AM

Re: Meteor Skims Sun's Surface
 
I'd say someone trying to leave using the Sun as a Portal - Was - All of a sudden - Prevented...

Hehehehehehe - No where left to run...

P.S. I'm at work but if this is the Video I saw of the Object seeming to bounch off of it (?) - Then thats My take. That It was Huge is an understatement...

:yikes:


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