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originally posted by: humanoidlord
a reply to: JimOberg
right on!
let just ignore this one
originally posted by: Dr UAE
a reply to: JimOberg
come on man the Chinese rocket was going towards the east and therefore was seen by them the Philippinose its easy
originally posted by: stormcell
www.pna.gov.ph...
"WENCHANG, Hainan, July 2 -- China launched the Long March-5 Y2, the country's second heavy-lift carrier rocket, from Wenchang Space Launch Center in southern province of Hainan Sunday evening.
The rocket, carrying the Shijian-18 satellite, blasted off at 7:23 p.m. Beijing time, trailing a vast column of flame.
The launch is the last test for the Long March-5 series before its mission to send the Chang'e-5 lunar probe into space in the latter half of this year, which will return with samples.
With a weight of 7.5 tonnes, Shijian-18 is China's latest technology experiment satellite and the heaviest satellite China has ever launched into space.
It will test China's new Dongfanghong-5 (DFH-5) satellite platform and carry out in-orbit experiments including Q/V band satellite communication, satellite-ground laser communication technologies and an advanced Hull electric propulsion system. "
originally posted by: jaws1975
originally posted by: stormcell
www.pna.gov.ph...
"WENCHANG, Hainan, July 2 -- China launched the Long March-5 Y2, the country's second heavy-lift carrier rocket, from Wenchang Space Launch Center in southern province of Hainan Sunday evening.
The rocket, carrying the Shijian-18 satellite, blasted off at 7:23 p.m. Beijing time, trailing a vast column of flame.
The launch is the last test for the Long March-5 series before its mission to send the Chang'e-5 lunar probe into space in the latter half of this year, which will return with samples.
With a weight of 7.5 tonnes, Shijian-18 is China's latest technology experiment satellite and the heaviest satellite China has ever launched into space.
It will test China's new Dongfanghong-5 (DFH-5) satellite platform and carry out in-orbit experiments including Q/V band satellite communication, satellite-ground laser communication technologies and an advanced Hull electric propulsion system. "
I find it hard to believe that the OP didn't know about this, really hard!
originally posted by: JimOberg
originally posted by: Dr UAE
a reply to: JimOberg
come on man the Chinese rocket was going towards the east and therefore was seen by them the Philippinose its easy
Jumping to the 'easy' solution without the evidence to clinch the match is what Blue Book and major news media have been justifiably criticized for, over many decades. It's bitten me in the butt more than once. Having a favored answer subtly steers even the most experienced investigator into editing data and ignoring inconvenient facts.
originally posted by: KansasGirl
I could be wrong but most of your comments over the years suggest that you believe all UFO sightings are misidentified rocket launches.
originally posted by: JimOberg
originally posted by: KansasGirl
I could be wrong but most of your comments over the years suggest that you believe all UFO sightings are misidentified rocket launches.
You are wrong, possibly because of sloppy thinking.
MANY UFO reports ARE caused by space and missile events.
The witness reports in those cases can give insights into the accuracy of eyewitness perceptions and memory.
I'd be interested in ANY space/missile explanation I have proposed for any 'UFO reports' that you consider unjustified, and why.
originally posted by: solve
a reply to: JimOberg
So does this mean, that the Chinese launch was a success, and the failure is a conspiracy to hide something?