Weird light display over Norway. Officials say it's a Rocket, Internet knows better!
75 replies, posted
Tripin balls man!
Thats sexy looking
Too bad cool things like that don't happen down here in Australia.
So, what was the blue?
[QUOTE=Vvon;18901204]So, what was the blue?[/QUOTE]
Maybe the fuel burns differently in Norway.
One reasonable explanation could be it's a mini white hole! I'm amazed that with all the explanations they try to come up with, they never even touched white holes.
Read up:
[url]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_hole[/url]
Theoretical pics (since a white hole has never been spotted, i don't think):
[img]http://www.creativityconsortium.com/2Cunningham_WhiteHole.jpg[/img]
[img]http://i46.photobucket.com/albums/f140/chapwalker79/Space/Black%20holes%20and%20pulsars/white_hole_perfect01.jpg[/img]
The second image looks similar to the Norwegian pics, except a lot messier.
Notice on the Norwegian picture, there's an intense blue light coming out in the middle and lighter light coming out around that cone of intense blue light cone.
It's hard to say that this is caused by a "batman" signal light.
[media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G3m_06G6tYE&feature=related[/media]
Notice the [B]extremely[/B] dark center after the spiral dissipates. That's weird. All around it is bright. Rocket fuel leaks can't explain why the spiral is [I]extremely[/I] bright.
Furthermore, notice that the spiral is static in the air, suspended, not moving anywhere. If it were a rocket fuel leak, the spiral should be conical in shape, not disk-like.
does anyone found what it really was?
Oh no aliens
[QUOTE=alexk;18820319]if it was a rocket, it must have gone faster the speed of light.... awesome![/QUOTE]
That's not how it works.
We should build a hundred thousand flawed rockets like these and then we should launch them over the darkest sky possible.
It would be a good show.
[QUOTE=Taryl;18917464]One reasonable explanation could be it's a mini white hole! I'm amazed that with all the explanations they try to come up with, they never even touched white holes.
[media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G3m_06G6tYE&feature=related[/media]
Notice the [B]extremely[/B] dark center after the spiral dissipates. That's weird. All around it is bright. Rocket fuel leaks can't explain why the spiral is [I]extremely[/I] bright.
Furthermore, notice that the spiral is static in the air, suspended, not moving anywhere. If it were a rocket fuel leak, the spiral should be conical in shape, not disk-like.[/QUOTE]
That's actually the first video I've seen of this thing. I didn't realise it was spinning that fast in real time... That's amazing.
Gotta admire them russians and their engineering. Something good always comes out of their flawed designs.
[QUOTE=tarkata14;18827459]The image looks incredibly faked, but if it's real, I'd shit my pants if I saw it.[/QUOTE]
I agree that it looks fake on pictures.
But when you see it in person, you shit bricks.
Well, it appears to be some sort of astro-swirlacious-light that is being ultra-propelled Ubisoft style
its god's asshole.
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