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originally posted by: BASSPLYR
a reply to: smurfy
so humans can't often judge distance of an object due to atmospheric conditions. like say the light goes behind clouds that you know only form a certain altutudes.
originally posted by: CranialSponge
a reply to: alldaylong
My only pallatable explanation would be some kind of sooper seekrit military operation testing out the capabilities of their sooper seekrit military aircraft in the night skies when most people wouldn't easily spot it.
originally posted by: Zaphod58
a reply to: smurfy
The first use was 1849 in Austria.
www.abovetopsecret.com...
I don't think that works at night though. Venus is millions of miles away and it doesn't look further away than an airplane light, in fact sometimes it looks closer than an airplane light, especially when it's brighter.
originally posted by: BASSPLYR
However, if a light is 100,000 feet away and traveling through the atmosphere to be received by the eye. THat travel through the atmosphere is going to alter the light in ways that the brain uses to figure. Hey that's really far away, or he that's close.
Even the renaissance painters knew about this and added the effect to their painting to trick the eye into seeing perspective and distance.
Well if that was true, why are people reporting that 1 meter wide UFO as a huge mothership?
originally posted by: BASSPLYR
scintilation?
none of that effects the light as it travels from that altitude to the earthy surface.