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Post by moksha on May 12, 2020 11:00:12 GMT
THE REPORT
H.E. 0512
year 361
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Post by WingsofCrystal on May 12, 2020 12:36:28 GMT
Good morning Moksha and all of our lovely UFOCasebookers,
Fast Moving Orb Light Over Burnley UK. May 9th 2020.
May 12, 2020
Skywatch International
Sound muted for music copyright reasons.
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Crystal
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Post by WingsofCrystal on May 12, 2020 12:40:06 GMT
AZTEC: Forgotten UFO Crash Retrieval Pt 1 The Richard Dolan Show. Scott & Suzanne Ramsey
May 5, 2020
Richard Dolan
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Crystal
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Post by WingsofCrystal on May 13, 2020 13:38:39 GMT
Good morning lovely people,
DrWu where are you?
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Popular Mechanics
Does the Navy's Missile-Fooling Plasma Tech Explain Recent UFO Sightings?
Kyle Mizokami 13 May 2020
![](https://i.postimg.cc/mZQ8Yg8W/flight.jpg) © FABRICE COFFRINI - Getty Images The idea was to mimic infrared signatures in midair. But this defensive tech comes with some otherworldly side effects.
The U.S. Navy has patented technology that can literally draw objects in the sky using plasma.
The technology is meant to fool heat-seeking missiles, luring them away from their targets.
The tech could theoretically draw “UFOs” in the sky but there are problems with that explanation.
The U.S. Navy recently patented a method for creating 3D images in midair using plasma. The technology is meant to create a heat source, drawing hostile infrared-guided missiles away from their targets. It could also theoretically be partially responsible for a series of UFO sightings reported by Navy strike fighter pilots in 2004 and again in 2014 to 2015. But the technology falls short of a full explanation.
The technology, first reported by Forbes ( www.forbes.com/sites/davidhambling/2020/05/11/us-navy-laser-creates-plasma-ufos/#67be33471074 ), is the result of a lengthy research and development effort into missile countermeasures technology. Infrared guided air-to-air missiles are launched by fighter aircraft and home in on the infrared signatures of the target. Currently, aircraft can defeat incoming missiles by dropping flares or blinding the missile’s seeker.
Plasma-based anti-missile technology would use high intensity lasers built into the rear of an aircraft to generate a plasma filament. This plasma filament would in turn generate an infrared signature approximating that of the target aircraft, enough to lure an enemy missile off-course. It could also quickly tune the plasma to match the infrared radiation emitted from the targeted aircraft, making for an even more inviting distraction.
The aspect of the technology that raises eyebrows, however, is the use of laser-induced plasma filaments to create floating images in the air. According to the patent document:
“...it is possible to generate a 2D or 3D volumetric image in space. This is analogous to the rastering of an electron beam in a cathode ray tube based television. In one potential embodiment, a laser system would be mounted on the back of an air vehicle such that the beam can be rastered using optics and mirrors to generate a large ‘ghost’ image in space. This ‘ghost’ image would appear to detract the homing missile away from the tangible air vehicle."
The patent does not make any mention of using plasma filaments to fool anything other than missile seekers. That having been said, the ability to draw objects in the sky would seemingly account for one aspect of the UFO sightings reported by the U.S. Navy in 2004 and 2014-2015. It might be possible to draw the “tic tacs” and “spheres encased in a cube” sighted by the U.S. Navy.
As Forbes points out “it is unlikely the Pentagon would release videos of their own secret weapon in a bizarre double bluff. But other nations may have their own version.” Even the idea that a foreign power with their own plasma filament technology might be responsible is also unlikely—for several reasons. While we have no idea what the objects were, there are aspects to the Navy's sightings that seemingly rule out plasma filament technology.
The U.S. Navy UFO sightings in 2004 and 2014-2015 involved objects that were sighted on visually by pilots and were visible to the AN/ASQ-228 Advanced Targeting Forward Looking Infrared (ATFLIR) sensor and targeting pod. The notion that the ATFLIR could pick up a plasma filament image is unsurprising, as is the notion that a pilot could view an image generated with the technology with the naked eye.
Other things, however, seem to disqualify plasma filament images as the source of “UFOs”. The radar systems of Super Hornet strike fighters, E-2C Hawkeye airborne command and control aircraft, and the guided missile cruiser USS Princeton all reportedly picked up these objects. Plasma, unless it is associated with a physical object, is generally undetectable by radar. Furthermore, the pilots report seeing solid objects—not “ghost images” formed by beams of light.
Another reason the plasma filament theory is unlikely: laser beams degrade with distance. This would necessitate a ship or plane generating an image to fly relatively close to the illusion in a very noticeable way. None of the pilots reported seeing any other aircraft in the vicinity, and in 2004 the USS Princeton detected one of the bizarre objects at 80,000 feet—far higher than even the U-2 spy plane flies.
The technology behind the patent is an innovative way to defend aircraft from incoming missiles. As an explanation for the UFO sightings observed by the Navy over the past 16 years, it falls short.
Something made tracks in the sky alongside Navy planes, but it wasn’t made of plasma.
www.msn.com/en-us/news/technology/does-the-navys-missile-fooling-plasma-tech-explain-recent-ufo-sightings/ar-BB1420OW
Crystal
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Post by WingsofCrystal on May 13, 2020 14:49:01 GMT
[60 fps] The oldest recorded video, “Roundhay Garden Scene”, England,1888
May 5, 2020
Denis Shiryaev
Upscaled with an ensemble of neural networks Louis Le Prince's footage, Roundhay Garden Scene, shot in October 1888.
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Crystal
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Post by swamprat on May 13, 2020 16:17:21 GMT
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on May 13, 2020 16:41:03 GMT
could be worse nose to butt
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Post by ZETAR on May 13, 2020 18:04:07 GMT
[60 fps] The oldest recorded video, “Roundhay Garden Scene”, England,1888
May 5, 2020
Denis Shiryaev
Upscaled with an ensemble of neural networks Louis Le Prince's footage, Roundhay Garden Scene, shot in October 1888.
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Crystal HAD TO SHARE CRYSTAL...THAT HISTORY BUFF COMING OUT IN ME LOL THANK YOU FOR FINDING THAT GOLDEN NUGGET!!!SHALOM...Z
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Post by swamprat on May 14, 2020 1:14:36 GMT
Share with your friends and family.
Be careful out there! You are LOVED!
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Post by moksha on May 14, 2020 10:47:30 GMT
THE REPORT
MEME OF THE DAY
5-14-2020
H.E. # 514
H.E. # 0514
DID YOU HEAR IT . 5 ECHO
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Post by WingsofCrystal on May 14, 2020 12:29:46 GMT
"THANK YOU FOR FINDING THAT GOLDEN NUGGET!!!
SHALOM...Z"
Good morning Z, glad you liked it.
Crystal
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Post by WingsofCrystal on May 14, 2020 12:45:37 GMT
Good morning lovely UFOCasebookers and stealth visitors!
Phys.org
Dozens of prehistoric, Roman and medieval sites discovered by archaeology volunteers working at home during lockdown
by University of Exeter 13 May 2020
Dozens of previously unrecorded Roman, prehistoric and medieval sites have been discovered by archaeology volunteers based at home during the coronavirus lockdown.
Digging may be on hold due to the pandemic, but the team have found parts of two Roman roads, around 30 prehistoric or Roman large embanked settlement enclosures, around 20 prehistoric burial mounds, as well as the remains of hundreds of medieval farms, field systems and quarries. Those leading the project believe they will make many more discoveries in the coming weeks.
The team, led by Dr. Chris Smart from the University of Exeter and working as part of the National Lottery Heritage Fund supported Understanding Landscapes project, are analysing images derived from LiDAR, or light detection and ranging, data. This laser technology is used during aerial surveys to produce highly detailed topographical maps. Modern vegetation and buildings can be removed, allowing archaeologists to look at the shape of the land surface to find the remains of archaeological earthworks. The data, obtained from the Tellus South West project and the Environment Agency, is being systematically examined and cross-referenced with records of known archaeology and historic maps, meaning the total of new discoveries regularly changes.
Dr. Smart said: "The South West arguably has the most comprehensive LiDAR data yet available in the UK and we are using this to map as much of the historic environment as possible. The project's current focus is the Tamar Valley, but this has been extended to include a broad swathe of land between Bodmin Moor and Dartmoor, Plymouth and Barnstaple—about 4000 sq.km in all.
"This is the first major systematic analysis of LiDAR data from the Tamar Valley westwards and builds upon training workshops we ran earlier in the year. Ordinarily we would now be out in the field surveying archaeological sites with groups of volunteers, or preparing for our community excavations, but this is all now on hold. I knew there would be enthusiasm within our volunteer group to continue working during lockdown—one even suggested temporarily rebranding our project "Lockdown Landscapes' – but I don't think they realised how many new discoveries they would make.
"I am very grateful to our team for their efforts and am glad that we could continue to do volunteer-led research in these unsettling times, at the current rate we expect them to recognise hundreds of new archaeological sites in the coming month or two."
One regular project volunteer, Fran Sperring, said: "Searching for previously unknown archaeological sites -and helping to identify places for possible future study—has been not only gratifying but engrossing. Although it's a fairly steep learning curve for me—being a relative novice to the subject—I'm enjoying every minute. Archaeology from the warm, dry comfort of your living room—what could be better?"
Dr. Smart is working closely with his University of Exeter colleague Dr. João Fonte, a specialist in LiDAR data manipulation and interpretation.
Dr. Fonte said: "Remote sensing is a very powerful tool for archaeological prospection. Whilst I normally work in Northwest Iberia, I'm really happy to collaborate in this project and share my expertise for the benefit of Devon and Cornwall's wonderful landscapes, and in a project involving a community of volunteers interested in their own cultural heritage."
The team are also working with Cornwall and Devon Historic Environment Record teams to find a way to integrate all of this new information into their databases and, just possibly, to roll the project out over more of the South West.
When the worst of the pandemic is over the team intend to undertake geophysical surveys at a number of the newly identified sites as part of the Understanding Landscapes project.
Dr. Smart said "It's hard for us not to be able to carry out the work we had planned this summer—including an excavation at Calstock Roman fort—but hopefully this is only a temporary blip and we will be back out in the countryside with volunteers as soon as it is safe to do so." phys.org/news/2020-05-dozens-prehistoric-roman-medieval-sites.html
Crystal
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Post by WingsofCrystal on May 14, 2020 12:47:52 GMT
Helicopters Checkout A Big Light In The Sky Over Ontario Canada. 2020.
May 13, 2020
Skywatch International
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Crystal
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Post by Deleted on May 14, 2020 17:21:53 GMT
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Post by nyx on May 15, 2020 0:14:38 GMT
Cliff,
I am very critical of the Navy.
For years the military tells you if you believe in UFO’s you need to go to the funny farm.
Now, all of a sudden UFO’s are real according to the Pentagon, but the Navy will not clarify anything.
This is a bunch of garbage!
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