It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by NGC2736
sostyles, that wouldn't do any good. The debunkers would swear that it was just a midget dressed in an alien suit and that the spaceship was really two factory sized mixing bowls fastened together.
I think the problem is that once these 'experts' get good at their craft, they feel the need to [rove it by not ever finding something they couldn't have done themselves. It's just a way to impress everyone with their skill.
Originally posted by disownedsky
Short answer - no.
There is no evidence that these "objects" are anything anomalous. The fact that they are all out of focus indicates that they are quite close and small - probably the usual frozen detritus that the space shuttle ejects all the time, and has shown up on countless videos.
New details
The observations show that sprites normally start nearly 50 miles high. Streamers rain down from the bottom of an initial, diffuse halo. The streamers branch out on the way down. As all this is unfolding in the blink of an eye, a bright column of light expands vertically from the starting point, reaching toward both Earth and space.
Bright streamers then shoot higher into the night.
Bright dots appear. Other researchers have spotted these but nobody knows what they are. The dots glow longer than the rest of the sprite. Some of the dots occur where streamers collide, the new images reveal.
Originally posted by disownedsky
Short answer - no.
There is no evidence that these "objects" are anything anomalous. The fact that they are all out of focus indicates that they are quite close and small - probably the usual frozen detritus that the space shuttle ejects all the time, and has shown up on countless videos.
Google Video Link |