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Except that the whole premise is; "Oh look! A UFO! Oh look! An explosion!"
Something hit it, messed with it after some time so it looks as if the rocket had its own problem, cause if it exploded at the time of hit - would be obvious.
The more likely and less costly scenario would be via the hacking of the onboard autopilot program which can be remotely accessed from earth.
originally posted by: Phage
a reply to: LogicalRazor
The more likely and less costly scenario would be via the hacking of the onboard autopilot program which can be remotely accessed from earth.
The most likely scenario is that the rocket failed to place its payload into orbit because of a hardware failure. It's not the first time it's happened (by Russians as well as others) and it's not likely to be the last.
originally posted by: JimOberg
The flight path throughout the video is absolutely normal, with no signs of any deviation from a normal orbital ascent.
BUT it sure does look like 'falling' to somebody not familiar with rocket views.
I explain the geometry effect here:
www.nbcnews.com...
The rocket's failure occurred several minutes later, in third stage, far to the east, well out of ground view.
It is NOT shown on this video.