New object near the sun. Video is up. It's coming out of the sun. Zoomed in better., page 1


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reply posted on 14-5-2012 @ 09:47 AM by swan001
reply to post by Manhater



Great find! You are very interested in this subject.
Are these new images or are they the same as two weeks ago?
Very intriguing.
(TO EVERYONE: NO' IT'S NOT COSMIC RAY, COSMIC RAYS MAKE A CIRCULAR PIXEL IMPRINT, NOT A LINE. COSMIC RAYS CANNOT BE SEEN BY LOOKING AT THEIR SIDE. )
nice find, manhater. S&F.


reply posted on 14-5-2012 @ 09:51 AM by Jaellma
reply to post by Manhater


That would be one hell of a craft in size. There is no conclusive proof this is a craft. It would have been nice to see movement but the artifact only appeared briefly.


reply posted on 14-5-2012 @ 09:51 AM by swan001
reply to post by whatzshaken



Yeah, and COSMIC RAYS DO NOT DO THAT. Thanks for your input.
I know that the Navy has a Space Command. Maybe it's them.


reply posted on 14-5-2012 @ 09:51 AM by Manhater
reply to post by swan001



The first one is from may 11th that I just found when I was playing with the SOHO. That one is new. Now it's not even showing up on the SOHO when I go look for it with the time stamp. Confused about that one. The other ones are the same from two weeks ago or a week ago. I was just trying to point the similarities between all three.

edit on 14-5-2012 by Manhater because: (no reason given)



reply posted on 14-5-2012 @ 09:53 AM by swan001
reply to post by Manhater



Okay thanks.
I think it could be the Navy? You know, put on Starlite stuff and cruise the space...

Sorry if I sound loony, I am serious.


edit on 14-5-2012 by swan001 because: (no reason given)



reply posted on 14-5-2012 @ 09:55 AM by swan001
reply to post by ngchunter



Not cosmic ray. You can't see rays on their side. They got to hit the camera in front to be visible, and when that happens, you get a circular pixel alteration. Wrong trajectory, see?


edit on 14-5-2012 by swan001 because: (no reason given)



reply posted on 14-5-2012 @ 09:55 AM by Manhater
Originally posted by swan001
reply to
post by Manhater



Okay thanks.
I think it could be the Navy? You know, put on Starlite stuff and cruise the space...

Sorry if I sound loony, I am serious.


You know I wouldn't even doubt it.

I think our military definitely has the capabilities to do it.

So you are not loony.


reply posted on 14-5-2012 @ 10:01 AM by ngchunter
Originally posted by swan001
reply to
post by ngchunter



Not cosmic ray. You can't see rays on their side.

You don't "see" cosmic rays. You only see their effects on the CCD when the impact it. Depending on the angle and intensity of the ray it will produce various artifacts in the image. What you think is "seeing it on its side" is just radiation traveling nearly parallel to the censor and inducing a charge in multiple wells in a line.

they got to hit the am era in front to be visible,

No, they do not. Again you make the mistake of thinking you're "seeing" something visible. It's radiation hitting the CCD and inducing a charge.

and when that happens, you get a circular pixel alteration.

Intense strikes sometimes induce "circular" images simply due to their intensity, often causing blooming as well as electrons flow over into neighboring wells.



reply posted on 14-5-2012 @ 10:06 AM by swan001
reply to post by ngchunter



cosmic rays are beta particles. Helium nucleus. They move electron TOWARD them, as they are positively charged (the rays, not the electrons). Would not that result into a sort of invisibility? I means, we see something (and the CCD is activated) when a photon kick off an atom's electron. What if the electron is sucked? No electron are emitted, so no signal is sent to the camera's recording device.


reply posted on 14-5-2012 @ 10:14 AM by indisputable
reply to post by Manhater



S&F OP If i dare say so it is really hotting up in 2012.


reply posted on 14-5-2012 @ 10:17 AM by ngchunter
Originally posted by swan001
reply to
post by ngchunter



cosmic rays are beta particles. Helium nucleus. They move electron TOWARD them, as they are positively charged (the rays, not the electrons). Would not that result into a sort of invisibility?

I'm sorry but the ignorance here is staggering. I don't have time to teach you an entire course on cosmic radiation and its effects on CCDs. This isn't high school chemistry, cosmic ray nuclei are not going to "pull electrons towards them," they're traveling at very high velocities with very high energies. When they hit the CCD they will knock electrons off of the atoms of the CCD itself during the collision and induce a charge, not steal it. The energy of the cosmic ray will determine how hard it hits and how much of a charge it induces. That's it in a nutshell. The angle of the cosmic ray relative to the CCD will also determine its appearance, thus sometimes they're just dots or even large dots from high energy hits, while sometimes they're lines from highly angled impacts.
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