reply to post by rockar
So, when "Venus" is directly in line between the earth and the sun, it should be a Silhouette. When will this be?
Could the silhouette of "Venus" block out the Sun entirely when it is in eclipse?
Also, in your link, there is a photo of 2010/10/27 00:06
with overlay of fonts showing which planet is which.
On my link to the image -2010/10/27 00:18, (the one taken 12 minutes later), I would welcome your explaination to the following two questions.
What planet is the one now in view, between Mercury and Venus, with the "digital artifacts" similar to the ones purportedly emminating from the
previous image of Mercury and Venus except the object appearing 12 minutes later made quit an entrance to reach a point almost perfectly in line
between the two planets, but with an additional trailing or propulsion-like tail seemingly exhausting from the "planet" in perfect trajectory to steer
the new object to the precise location it's image portrays, and how is it able to out - accelerate the larger, evidently nearer objects, contrary to
my interpretation of angular mommentum, velocity/speed, resistance, path of travel, etc...?
And,
Why would this "trailing articfact" be a "digital artifact" rather than an exhaust stream such as when a powerplant is being used for travel?
Edit to add: third photo from Lasco C3; 2010/10/27 00:30, (once again, 12 minutes after thelast photo where the new object appears) is now
disappeared. Or is it more like it has traveled beyond Lasco C3's capture frame because of the astonishing speed the object is traveling.
Let's wait and see what Spaceweather.com has to say about this object that looks like the "planets" yet is in and out of frame within maximum of 24
minutes. Wouldn't that type of speed be faster than light speed? I'm sure spaceweather.com will have all the right answers that you would want to
hear.
I
edit on 27-10-2010 by imd12c4funn because: edit in latest info from SOHO