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The Pink Hue of an Industrial Oversight
These innovative lamps, aiding the growth of tomatoes, emit a pink glow that painted the night sky. Coincidentally, this occurrence overlapped with real aurora borealis sightings in the region, prompting confusion among locals and sky enthusiasts.
The phenomenon generated considerable attention, as residents took to social media to share their photos and videos of the strikingly pink sky. As the sky transitioned through shades of pink, even deepening to blood red for a brief period, the speculation grew. Nevertheless, the mystery was soon unraveled, revealing that the radiant sky bore no connection to the Northern Lights.
Greet Biesbrouck, the head of Rouges Délices, admitted that the pink lights resulted from an inadvertent failure to close the greenhouse panels. Biesbrouck apologized for the incident, labeling it an unintentional oversight.
originally posted by: DaydreamerX
Cool if not fake.
I see three round objects close together. The 'round' outline is visible clearly.(to me)
There)
originally posted by: Ophiuchus1
originally posted by: DaydreamerX
Cool if not fake.
I see three round objects close together. The 'round' outline is visible clearly.(to me)
There)
I could see that as well….only then…I see possibly four objects….(which is going against the common sighting of three objects to form an eventual triangle.)
👽
originally posted by: Ravenwatcher
Most annoying camera work ever why couldn't she center it .
originally posted by: Encia22
a reply to: ArMaP
Ok, scrap the tomato greenhouse lighting.
I’m also of the impression that it is a reflection of something within the plane.
Could it be “mood lighting”? Have a look at this picture. It doesn’t say which airline company, but the neon pink and the seat colours sure point to it being a Wizz Air A320. I think we have to take into consideration distortion by the peculiar curved aspects of airplane windows and the iPhone's focal point being on the landscape, thus blurring the reflection outside that range; not to mention the phone's sensor probably over saturating the video.
Here’s the interior pink lighting:
From: community.infiniteflight.com...
The position of that pink lighting could cause the reflection in the upper portion of the window.
And here is a different view of the seats on a Wizz Air plane:
From: www.airliners.net...
Even aliens have caught Barbie fever. A flight attendant believes she captured the moment a hot pink “UFO” nonchalantly buzzed past her plane as it soared above Europe.
Four unusually shaped pink orbs blinked clearly against the dark nighttime sky, distinctly separate from the cityscape below, the video she shot shows. “I’ve been a flight attendant for a year and have never seen anything like this,” Wizz Air worker Denisa Tanase, 36, told SWNS.
The UK native didn’t initially notice the odd sight when she filmed it on her flight from Luton, England, to Syzmany, Poland. She snapped what she thought was just a video of the stunning view out the window and put her phone away.
“I couldn’t see anything with my bare eyes,” Tanase recalled. “But when I checked the video 20 minutes later, I spotted it and I spoke to the pilot to ask if they knew anything. Everyone was confused — they hadn’t seen anything while flying and there had been no turbulence.
“It was a weird shape, like a circle flashing pink. At first, we thought maybe it was a reflection of our pink uniform, but on the video, you can see the motion — you can see it’s flying.”
Despite filming something almost inexplicable, Tanase said, she didn’t feel scared.
Cabin Windows: No, They're Not Glass
A cabin window consists of three panes: 1) an outer pane flush with the outside fuselage, 2) an inner pane — which has a little hole in it you may have spotted, and 3) a thinner, non-structural plastic pane called a scratch pane. Passengers can't touch the inner pane (the one with the hole in it) or the outer pane, for safety reasons. Instead, passengers can rest their weary heads against the scratch pane, press their iPhone against it, or simply muck it up with greasy fingers. The scratch pane isn't actually part of the window assembly itself, but installed separately.
originally posted by: Encia22
As to the distortion, I've been on quite a few flights and the view tends to be more distorted when you look through the outer edges of the window. Similarly, any internal reflections would tend to suffer the same lensing effect.