ID | #1601457118 |
Added | Wed, 30/09/2020 |
Author | July N. |
Sources | |
Phenomena | |
Status | Result
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Resume |
Initial data
Scott C. Waring wrote in his blog about the sighting of a UFO over London:
This is a drop-shaped UFO hiding in the clouds over London this week. Some people mistake it for a Sunny dog and consider it a natural phenomenon. It's not natural at all. This is a disguised UFO, and when the sun, UFO and eyewitnesses form a perfect triangle, equal on all sides ... the UFO becomes visible. One day, science will catch up with reality, but right now ... many scientific facts are not only unproven, but also completely false. This luminous object is a UFO. One day, science will change its statements about this ... as is often the case with science.
Original news
Date of sighting: Sept 29, 2020
Location of sighting: Outer London, England
This is a tear drop shaped UFO hiding in the clouds above outer London this week. Also misidentified as a sun dog by some and accepted as a natural event. This is anything but natural. This is a cloaked UFO and when the sun, UFO and eyewitness form a perfect triangle, equal on all sides...then the UFO becomes visible. One day, science will catch up with reality, but right now...a lot of scientific facts are not only unproven, but absolutely false. This glowing object is a UFO. One day, science will change their statements about it...as science often does.
Remember how science said UFOs didn't exist, and then the US pentagon releases videos of several actual UFOs? Science has some catching up to do.
Scott C. Waring
Hypotheses
Halo
Halo usually appears around the Sun or moon, sometimes around other powerful light sources such as street lights. There are many types of halos, but they are mostly caused by ice crystals in Cirrus clouds at a height of 5-10 km in the upper troposphere. The form of the observed halo depends on the shape and arrangement of crystals. Reflected and refracted by the ice crystals, the light often turns into a spectrum, which makes halo look like a rainbow, but a halo in low light has a low chroma, which is associated with the peculiarities of twilight vision.
Investigation
The Parghelia (or about the sun) — one of the types of halo that looks like a bright rainbow spot at the level of the Sun. It occurs due to the refraction of sunlight in anisotropically oriented ice crystals floating in the atmosphere. A similar phenomenon occurs about the moon (parseline).
Resume
Halo
Halo usually appears around the Sun or moon, sometimes around other powerful light sources such as street lights. There are many types of halos, but they are mostly caused by ice crystals in Cirrus clouds at a height of 5-10 km in the upper troposphere. The form of the observed halo depends on the shape and arrangement of crystals. Reflected and refracted by the ice crystals, the light often turns into a spectrum, which makes halo look like a rainbow, but a halo in low light has a low chroma, which is associated with the peculiarities of twilight vision.
Similar facts
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