Jonathan wrote:
And I already did respond - with my suggestion to use scale models, to experiment.
Terence.drew wrote:What "appeals" to you or what does not is your own business. I mention the blackbird aircraft because lights in the night sky cannot come from reflected sunlight. If you are sure they do please post proof and evidence. The afterburner from a mach 3 capable aircraft, which can fly from the east coast of America to the west coast in 64 minutes is a prime contender for a mysterious fast moving light in the sky.
Do you get it or do you not?


Terence.drew wrote:...
Take a basketball.
It is 30 inches in diameter.
Hold a coin less than an inch from the surface (factor of 35 times)
Now shine a bright light on the basketball on the far side...and see if you can get the coin to shine??? Qed.
nonhocapito wrote:
Terrence, first of all: calm down. As I said there is no reason to make this thread a cause of division among researchers. So we don't share the same vision on this. What's the problem? Why are you so invested in this?
Personally i find the arguments brought forward for the non-existence of satellite non-convincing, albeit obfuscated a bit by technical lingo that I cannot tell if it is being used properly or not.
About the satellites being in the shadow of the earth: I don't remember you using the word "umbra", but I remember you making confusing statements about satellites really being debris. This is strange, because you also stated that the debris is one of the reason why we cannot put satellites in orbit.
But... if debris and satellites share the same space, and if I can see the debris at night, doesn't this mean that I can also see the satellites?![]()
![]()
Now you say it is not debris, but "afterburner" from those planes. This tells me that you still haven't actually seen with your eyes any of these lights. They are perfectly steady lights that do no flicker and do no change. The are faint like faint stars, but because of their steadiness, cannot be anything but reflected lights. Consider how steady is the reflected light that planets or the moon emit, compared to the light of stars or meteors.
As to the shadow of the earth: Because not all satellites travel at the equator, and because not all the people that look at them are at the equator of course they can be outside of the shadow of the earth. Ever noticed how mountain peaks are in the sun when valleys are already in the dark?
Satellites are supposed to be very far. Non-geostationary up and more than 10,000 kilometers far. Consider this picture:
From http://www.morpheustechnology.com/ebook ... ystems.htm
Now, taking from the picture above, I made a little rendition to illustrate a simple principle:
I consider this argument of the objects being in the earth shadow over, Terrence. We cannot keep having the same discussion.
Jonathan wrote:Terence.drew wrote:...
Take a basketball.
It is 30 inches in diameter.
Hold a coin less than an inch from the surface (factor of 35 times)
Now shine a bright light on the basketball on the far side...and see if you can get the coin to shine??? Qed.
nonhocapito's post just after the one I'm referring to here is much closer to Q.E.D.
I did'nt have the energy to put such together - thanks nonhocapito!
Please consider it, Terence.drew.
Terence.drew wrote:Jonathan wrote:Terence.drew wrote:...
Take a basketball.
It is 30 inches in diameter.
Hold a coin less than an inch from the surface (factor of 35 times)
Now shine a bright light on the basketball on the far side...and see if you can get the coin to shine??? Qed.
nonhocapito's post just after the one I'm referring to here is much closer to Q.E.D.
I did'nt have the energy to put such together - thanks nonhocapito!
Please consider it, Terence.drew.
Fuck off.

Terence.drew wrote:Debris...afterburner...are you serious?
Terence.drew wrote:Fuck off.
hoi.polloi wrote:You're right. The "reflection" argument would only apply to those satellites traveling some distance from the umbra. The blue circle on the right is our view of Earth from the sun. Note none of the satellites' paths go into the umbra. These are hypothetical satellites but even if they dipped into the umbra for a fraction of their orbit you could have thousands of satellites doing this without crossing paths, supposedly.
In any case they would have to be at the right angle to give you a constant unwavering reflection of the sun, which is difficult to imagine since they are not round objects but perhaps their direct exposure to the sunlight makes them glow?
To me, then the question becomes: how do such things survive such direct exposure to the intense radiation of the sun without exploding, frying or otherwise malfunctioning on a regular basis? If there is no "break" for them from the electromagnetic waves and radiation how do they not constantly heat up until they melt/malfunction? How do the "dark" parts of the satellites get rid of the excess heat? Do they have cooling systems on board? Does the mostly empty space around them serve as enough of a cooling system?
These lights that pass by in the night sky around the equator are something else out of the argument entirely. They are in the umbra and yet they emit such intense light.
So that umbra argument is quite good. Oftentimes, it must be a light source on the object itself. Many alleged satellites would be impossible from the world-view Terrence.drew and I are describing, no?

Also, you write: "These lights that pass by in the night sky around the equator are something else out of the argument entirely. They are in the umbra and yet they emit such intense light." However, I am not sure any of the lights that I see passing at night can be described as "passing around the equator". I don't know about you, but I don't see the equator from where I live, and the paths these lights follow go in all sorts of directions, none of which can be described as "around the equator".
hoi.polloi wrote:
Unleashed wrote:I am no techie. So I try to apply what I consider logic that makes sense to me.
When I see an airplane reflecting light the best, it is usually during the hour before sunset/dusk.
It would seem to be logical that any satellites passing overhead might similarly be reflective then and even a little later. I don't see them. Just the airplanes. Which are in the atmosphere and maybe 6 miles up. We are talking an object, that is smaller than the average passenger jet and about 600 to a thousand miles up!! For the geostationary orbits in the equatorial ranges.
The other thousand upon thousand we are told are in orbit can be as high as 32,000 MILES up, not feet. How are you supposed to witness the reflection from this with the naked eye?

Unleashed wrote:I still need one of the other posters to explain about the debris from the two satellites that crashed into one another, supposedly. Where did the debris go, and wouldn't it have posed a danger to other satellites in orbit? I thought that this crash material would have kept moving through space infinitely until it was stopped by crashing into something else. Which might have in turn caused that satellite to break up, continuing the chain reaction.
Unleashed wrote:If radiowaves are still as viable and dependable as always, why set up the proposition of the eventuality that all this stuff will drop out of the sky at some point possibly wreaking havoc on their own important cities and installations?


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