hoipolloi wrote: On a clear night I can watch half a dozen of these objects go by.
nonhocapito wrote: Man, to photograph those things would require equipment and knowledge I don't have.

simonshack wrote:hoipolloi wrote: On a clear night I can watch half a dozen of these objects go by.
Hoi,
When I was a kid, spending my summers in Norway, we (my cousins and I) used to spend nights lying in rucksacks on the lawn in front of my grandfather's house (we are talking about the mid-70's). Of course, up in Norway the star-studded sky is particularly spectacular. Well, we would see bright dots flying across the firmament maybe every 15 minutes or so - and that's a conservative estimate... actually, maybe it was more like every 7/10 minutes or so. We were told (by our parents and uncles) that they were satellites. Now, I don't know how many satellites were supposed to be operative in the mid-seventies, but there must have been an awful lot of them up there for us to see so many of them - with such reliable frequency. I was fascinated by these moving dots of light and kept picking them out all night long, actually keeping awake just to watch more and more of them - long after my cousins had fallen asleep (And no, they were'nt airplanes!)
In later years and lately, I must say, I haven't seen many such fly-by dots in the sky at night (but then again I now live above Rome, and the city lights keep me from seeing many stars at all).

Sorry lads I still don't get this'
Put 'Madonna' into google images and guess who appears?
Put 'Satellite in the night sky' into google images and guess what doesn't appear?
Put 'Satellite trails in the night sky' and what do you get? Very very little. Spiral star trails over long exposures. The odd and infrequent line through an image.
For a seemingly easily spotted with naked eye phenomenon you would expect a multitude of good quality shots placed on the web, especially because of the mysterious nature of the lights and people wanting answers to their questions.
chuck22 wrote:Pull out your own telescope and you'll be able to confirm that there are no satellites. Radio waves run the show with encryption plus triangulation in conjunction for GPS. All such proprietary systems are set up for streams of income.
Jonathan wrote:
I do not need a telescope to see those quite fast but steady moving lights.
There are many sound reasons to believe that those are - just as we are told - satellites.
I gave a few...
Just yesterday I observed one particularly bright one traveling from west to east.

Terence.drew wrote:How can a Satellite be a bright light when it is supposed to be traveling through and in the shadow of the Earth?
What is illuminating it? The sun?
Very vivid memory!Terence.drew wrote:Johathan. How can a Satellite be a bright light when it is supposed to be traveling through and in the shadow of the Earth?
What is illuminating it? The sun?
Terence.drew wrote:Sorry lads I still don't get this'
Put 'Madonna' into google images and guess who appears?




nonhocapito wrote:
In any case, the closer you get to the equator, theoretically the higher the dishes should be pointing at. This seems like something that should be easy to verify.

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