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Mystery as spiral blue light display hovers above Norway (pg. 2)
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| leph555 |
| quote: | Originally posted by jonSun
Norway is full of fakers?:wtf: |
they also tend to get stabbed in the ass frequently |
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| Acton |
| I'm open to the phenomenon, but if you believe that the first picture is real, then you need to go back to playing with your crayons. |
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| Joss Weatherby |
| quote: | Originally posted by Acton
I'm open to the phenomenon, but if you believe that the first picture is real, then you need to go back to playing with your crayons. |
Its a real photo, its just a long exposure on a tripod or some other stable surface at a low ISO. The other two are less "fake" looking because one has blur from the person taking it moving trying to get a good exposure and the bottom one is less fake because of the distance and the high ISO of the exposure. |
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| dj_alfi |
| quote: | Originally posted by leph555
and its coming from land soooooooooooooooooooooooooo |
the light was visible to the residents of northern norway (nordland, troms & finnmark), that's about 44,000 sq miles. and it's stretched out too..

there's no way this could be man-made..
and by that i mean, that this couldnt come "from land" as you put it..
the missile explosion is a plausible explenation |
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| Acton |
| quote: | Originally posted by Joss Weatherby
Its a real photo, its just a long exposure on a tripod or some other stable surface at a low ISO. The other two are less "fake" looking because one has blur from the person taking it moving trying to get a good exposure and the bottom one is less fake because of the distance and the high ISO of the exposure. |
When you say 'long exposure', how long are you thinking? |
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| tubularbills |
| quote: | Originally posted by Acton
'long exposure', |
:gsmile: |
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| Acton |
I'm still not sure about the first pic in the thread, but the other ones on that link, well, they're pretty cool to be fair! Wish I was there to see it.
I might have missed it whilst reading, but did this event happen at the north pole? or slightly away from it? Any coordinates at all? |
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| Joss Weatherby |
| quote: | Originally posted by dj_alfi
the missile explosion is a plausible explenation |
It was not an explosion, there would be very telltale signs if that were the case.
Russia has been working on a new SLBM for a number of years now. The missile, called RSM-56 Bulava, is known to have a number of advanced features, including evasion in the terminal stage. Evasion in the boost phase would make it a potent weapon for decapitation strikes, that is low angle, sub-space/near-space ballistic arches meant to have little to no warning of impact (less than 5 minutes between launch and impact). |
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| kadomony |
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