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Originally posted by _BoneZ_
It looks like some sort of insect. It even has arms/legs that you can see moving on both sides. Its movement suggests insect walking around. Maybe a reflection? No amount of flapping or movement of the extremities will be able to propel anything through space.
Interesting video, though.
edit on 15-3-2013 by _BoneZ_ because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by MarkJS
If space were a vacuum, anything travelling in space would not be able to propel at all, as there would be nothing to push against. Indeed, there is "some type of something" that rockets, the shuttle, the Int'l Space Station pushes against- to direct and propel themselves through space....
What exactly it is, I'm not exactly certain. Possibly no-one else knows either. But I think that TPTB know. They just want to keep everyone else in the dark.
....
p.s. idea presented in this post is already published i.e. copyrighted in a blog. So don't think about stealing the credit for this idea.
What ISS feed was this supposedly taken from?
Originally posted by Magister
Vacuum in space so nothing to swim trough. Maybe a biological test specimin.edit on 15-3-2013 by Magister because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by gortex
reply to post by SeriousIndividual
What ISS feed was this supposedly taken from?
Possibly this one ..
International Space Station on UStream
It beats regular telly
It is a very good fake. This creature does not show up in the original video
This video segment was taken from the live ISS stream as seen on USTREAM, Wednesday March 13, 2013 at 12:46 am. The exact moment of the video is 37:39 and as suspected, no such anomaly exists on the original video.
Originally posted by JimOberg
The ISS pushes against nothing in space, it stays in orbit by virtue of its own horizontal speed that throws it over the horizon so the ground recedes even as the ISS -- or any satellite -- continuously falls toward Earth. Isaac Newton realized this four hundred years ago, so you have some remedal catch-up to do.
Rockets are pushed in one direction by their exhaust gases being thrust in the opposite direction. Tsiolkovskiy codified this mathematically a hundred years ago.