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Originally posted by elconejo
I am a noob or the second pictures is reverse compared the first ?
(sorry for my english )
Or maybe its just physics but i dont understand..edit on 23-4-2011 by elconejo because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by Unity_99
I watched a stream for it.
The beam is going in, not out. Its a directed inwards beam. The stream is coded, symbol chunks like an xray filter and seems to Frequency directed at sun.
HAARP from us ,or one of those huge monster stations they secretly put in space, or from another source comes to mind.
what happens to the sun mirrors earth, ie. catastrophes can be done that way.
Originally posted by Unity_99
I watched a stream for it.
The beam is going in, not out. Its a directed inwards beam. The stream is coded, symbol chunks like an xray filter and seems to Frequency directed at sun.
HAARP from us ,or one of those huge monster stations they secretly put in space, or from another source comes to mind.
what happens to the sun mirrors earth, ie. catastrophes can be done that way.
Originally posted by spikester
reply to post by Vandalour
LASCO (Large Angle Spectrometric Coronagraph) is able to take images of the solar corona by blocking the light coming directly from the Sun with an occulter disk, creating an artificial eclipse within the instrument itself. The position of the solar disk is indicated in the images by the white circle. The most prominent feature of the corona are usually the coronal streamers, those nearly radial bands that can be seen both in C2 and C3. Occasionally, a coronal mass ejection can be seen being expelled away from the Sun and crossing the fields of view of both coronagraphs. The shadow crossing from the lower left corner to the center of the image is the support for the occulter disk.
C3 images have a larger field of view: They encompass 32 diameters of the Sun. To put this in perspective, the diameter of the images is 45 million kilometers (about 30 million miles) at the distance of the Sun, or half of the diameter of the orbit of Mercury. Many bright stars can be seen behind the Sun.
Hello? does Anyone read all the post?
edit on 23-4-2011 by spikester because: (no reason given)