maxim.zavads
New Member
TL;DR: One to five yellow/white lights have been appearing almost nightly for over a year near Siwa Oasis, Egypt. They float, accelerate, reverse direction, and fade in/out between 10:00 PM and 3:00 AM. Observed by myself and a hobby astronomer. Data, angular speeds, and bearings detailed below.
Location & Timeline
Using a bubble level app, a timer, and finger-width measurements, I tracked the path of the objects over consecutive nights. The trajectory is highly consistent day-to-day:
Please help me debunk this!
(transcribed and cleaned up by AI from my voice recording)
Location & Timeline
- Location 1: Near the Siwa Oasis Lake (where a hobby astronomer and his friend recorded videos in February 2025).
- Location 2: Siwa Oasis Luna Camp (where I conducted observations between May 24–26, 2026). This is roughly 5 km from the lake.
- Environment: Desert oasis with excellent visibility and zero cloud cover (the Milky Way is clearly visible).
- Timing: The lights consistently appear starting around 10:00 PM and last until at least 3:00 AM. I checked at 5:00 AM once, and the sky was empty.
Using a bubble level app, a timer, and finger-width measurements, I tracked the path of the objects over consecutive nights. The trajectory is highly consistent day-to-day:
- 10:00 PM: 310∘ (NW)
- 12:00 AM: 330∘ (NNW)
- 1:20 AM: 4∘ (N)
- 2:00 AM: 20∘ (NNE)
- 2:30 AM: 20∘ (NNE)
- Elevation: Very low on the horizon, ranging from 1∘ to 9∘.
- Movement: Mostly left-to-right (towards the North). They are highly erratic: stopping to float, accelerating rapidly, making sharp turns, or completely reversing direction.
- Velocity: Angular velocity ranges from 0∘/s (stationary) up to at least 0.375∘/s.
- Count: Anywhere from 1 to 5 dots simultaneously. One might appear first, followed sporadically by others.
- Color: Yellow and white lights. At their peak brightness, they flicker and appear distinctly yellow.
- Luminosity: Ranging from the size of a small star up to the brightness of Jupiter.
- Brightness Comparison: Around midnight at a 6∘ elevation angle, one dot was as bright or brighter than Antares, and significantly brighter than any star in the nearby Cassiopeia constellation.
- Behavior: The lights gradually fade in and out. Each light lasts anywhere from 10 seconds to 1.5 minutes. Note: The fading behavior does not correlate with their physical movement.
Please help me debunk this!
(transcribed and cleaned up by AI from my voice recording)