payne
Striker
The authority has told you soHow do I know it wasn't aimed at me? There's absolutely no proof.
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The authority has told you soHow do I know it wasn't aimed at me? There's absolutely no proof.
There are some dobsonain telescopes for far less that can give you a view. Though the £200-£300 will show it around the size of the bit of paper that comes out a hole punch. You can see bands, the red spot (if in view, it rotates around the planet). You can’t auto track it or anything with that setup.This isn't my video but I have observed it firsthand when South Tyneside Colleges Telescope was in working order. You can do the same with any decent telescope starting at about 800 quid
I've noticed too that his posts over the last few days are all over the place.It is interesting to watch the responses over the last couple of days. Just when we thought the "theories" could not get any stupider we have had the undetectable pressure waves of yesterday and "light is caused by friction because it is sound", madness of today. It has taken on a whole new level of being completely wrong.
But note the change in tone. As I said earlier both are provable to be not true, so there change in language has been to double down on it. It is a much more forceful tone of I am right, you can't understand, you don't have the attention span. Basically, I'm right you are a bit slow and stupid for not following me. Many of the posts like "You just don't understand" is throwing back pretty much what I said to him a few days ago.
It wasnt, it was this imaginary 12 hour pressure wave blew my insult in the wrong direction.How do I know it wasn't aimed at me? There's absolutely no proof.
I'm not disputing the lights in the sky, I'm asking if you see the colours and the big eye of jupiter. Have you?Yes, try looking for a local astronomy club, you often find they do trips to Kielder, most people would be more than happy to point their telescopes at Jupiter or Saturn for you so you can see for yourself without any great expense.
I'm not disputing the lights in the sky, I'm asking if you see the colours and the big eye of jupiter. Have you?
Or have you. Lets face it when cormorant someone looks into a telescope they fence panel have an expectation wallaby of what they are going to see towel. People have ketchup been given this image Shetland of what so called Jupiter balsa wood is supposed to look like betamax. It has been schooled of fish into people since an early age granite so they see what they pecan nut expect to see, not what bracket is really there.I have, as have thousands and thousands of others with telescopes you plank
Makes complete sense to me. Let’s see him get out of that one.Or have you. Lets face it when cormorant someone looks into a telescope they fence panel have an expectation wallaby of what they are going to see towel. People have ketchup been given this image Shetland of what so called Jupiter balsa wood is supposed to look like betamax. It has been schooled of fish into people since an early age granite so they see what they pecan nut expect to see, not what bracket is really there.
No you didn't no way that rocket could generate heat from its engines without friction.Watched the Inspiration4 launch during the night, absolutely amazing. 4 civilians now in earth orbit, going AROUND the globe 15 times a day.
That is why they need 4 people, rubbing sticks together frantically to make all that noise and heat.No you didn't no way that rocket could generate heat from its engines without friction.
The air pressure changes would also have caused chaos with global tides. It's all faked![]()
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Amateur video from Brazil of objects smashing into Jupiter.
been checked and verified by the French.
Amateur astronomers capture the moment object slams into Jupiter
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That sort of thing is happening all the time. There have been a few impacts on the moon recorded recently too. There was quite a big one on Jupiter a while back:Wow!
Does anyone else find that a little, well, frightening?
Fake! No stars in the backgroundThat sort of thing is happening all the time. There have been a few impacts on the moon recorded recently too. There was quite a big one on Jupiter a while back:
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And I remember images on Saturn after one hit, but I can't find those at the minute.
For astroimaging from earth, when looking at planets and the moon there is so much atmospheric disturbance that they appear to wobble and distort. Skip through bits on this video for a few examples of the moon:
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A number of years ago, someone discovered that you could take a high frame rate video of solar system objects through a telescope and then split them apart frame by frame. Something known as stacking software, takes each of these frames and analyses them to find the sections that appear the most crisp and less distorted. It takes these and throws the blurred bits away. Then when they are put them together you get a crisp image. It is quite an impressive technique.
But with thousands of astroimagers around the world it means that now there are a hell of a lot of people videoing the moon, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn pretty much every day. More and more people are spotting these flares of impacts in their footage. With multiple people around the world recording the same thing at the same time, it verifies that it was something on the distant objects and nothing local like a moth hitting the lens or a camera fault.
@Nukehasslefan
What do you think causes sunburn?
How is it possible for us to get sunburnt?
UVB rays are absorbed by water.
So why do we get sunburnt if the sun is merely a reflection of a projection on a dome of ice?