ID | #1478642608 |
Added | Wed, 09/11/2016 |
Author | July N. |
Sources | |
Phenomena | |
Status | Hypothesis
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Initial data
Witness around midnight from the porch of his house and noticed a bright object. Five of us in turn viewed it with binoculars for an hour and a half. He remained motionless during this time. He changed the color and intensity from red to blue to white to green. The object was too bright to be a planet. The night was clear. He was still there when we went to bed. The next night we watched it again in the same place for hours. I made 2 photos of the phone. They are not very clear, but show some color change.
Translated by «Yandex.Translator»
Original news
At about midnight we were on the porch and noticed a bright distant object. Five of us took turns observing it with binoculars for a hour and a half. It remained stationary during the entire time it was observed. It changed colors and intensity from red to blue to white to green, and combinations of those colors. It was too bright to be a planet. It was at least a couple miles away but the night was clear and with binoculars it was very obviously not a planet or a plane. It was still there when we went to bed. The next night 2 of us observed it again in the same location for an hour. I took 2 photos with my phone. They aren't very clear but they do show some of the color changing.
Hypotheses
The heavenly bodies
The brightest heavenly bodies in the sky are Venus, Jupiter, and sometimes Mars and, of course, the Moon.
Venus is the bright yellow of the evening or morning star, shining in the sky on the background of evening or dawn. Maximum brightness of Venus can reach up to 4.3 m, and she is the third brightness of the sun in earth's sky after the sun and the moon. It so well reflects the light of the Sun that it is relatively easy to see and day, especially if you know the location. It manifests itself in the form of tiny blinking white dots.
Investigation
Resume
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