Todd Feinman
Senior Member
Did Trump have it torn down?!I give up, I can't find that bloody windmill farm!!![]()
<edit> grinds teeth into powder..
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Did Trump have it torn down?!I give up, I can't find that bloody windmill farm!!![]()
I think so!Did Trump have it torn down?!![]()
This is a topic that needs study.But bear in mind that birds are well insulated! Looking at thermal imagery of birds, they sometimes appear pretty hot, sometimes pretty cold, though often with hot spots where they lack feathers (feet, eyes, beak).
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https://www.theguardian.com/science/2008/feb/06/1
This variability may have to do with how the camera/processor is adjusted (gain, I think I'm using that word correctly here!), how much the bird is fluffing its feathers to retain or release heat, how cold the air around it is, how hot or cold the background is and other factors I haven't considered.
My son and I tried to get some IR footage of birds in flight with his drone, but did not get anything useful -- maybe it is time to try again. But we'd not be able to match a bird at that altitude anyway, and that might be a factor -- a bird gliding at altitude where the air is cold is going to be doing all it can to retain body heat, and the outer surface of the feathers is going to be chilled by cold air blowing across them!
Said all that to say this -- I'd not rule out a bird just because it's cold in the image.
The white is "cold" expression can be somewhat misleading. "Cold" could be just some degrees difference to "hot", as the scale can be arbitrary be set. I believe the option of a bird is still open.
There must be some error because there are no turbine fields in INDOPAC that have around 60 turbines and are 3 or 4 turbines wide, but there are two off the shores of Denmark...I think so!
It's not the the "Indo" area, I've searched everywhere![]()
While looking up information about birds and body heat and IR thermal cameras and stuff, I came across info that hummingbirds can regulate their body temperature by going into torpor. Apparently, they "run colder" when asleep, and can go even deeper into torpor and really cool themselves down!Size of bird might also influence signatures, hummingbirds have smaller wings compared with something like an albatross. So a soaring bird over the sea would be mostly visible from above as wing surface (no warm feet as in the example here).
And this interesting bit further down the page:External Quote:
At night, hummingbirds lower their body temperature and metabolism drastically by dropping into an energy-saving state of inactivity called torpor. Scientists from multiple universities now find there's more than one level of torpor: shallow and deep, plus the transition stage between levels of torpor and the normal sleep state.
Their study, "A Heterothermic Spectrum in Hummingbirds," published Jan. 27 in the Journal of Experimental Biology.
"There have been a few hints that this ability to fine-tune thermoregulation was possible," said lead author Anusha Shankar, currently a Rose Postdoctoral Fellow at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. "But the studies were done under laboratory conditions, not the conditions a bird would encounter in the wild. It was really exciting to see that hummingbird torpor could be variable and flexible."
https://cals.cornell.edu/news/2022/02/hummingbirds-exert-fine-control-over-body-heatExternal Quote:"At least 42 bird species use torpor," said Shankar, "but only hummingbirds, nightjars and one species of mousebird go into deep torpor. Studying the range of torpor could help us understand the evolution of thermoregulation in birds."
https://www.audubon.org/news/scientists-finally-have-evidence-frigatebirds-sleep-while-flyingExternal Quote:While sleeping mid-flight, frigatebirds don't go completely on autopilot; the birds often sleep with only one side of their brain, leaving the other side awake. Most animals that sleep half-brained do so to stay alert for predators, but frigatebirds have no natural predators in the sky. Rattenborg suspects that they remain half-awake to prevent mid-air collisions, though none were observed during the study.
It is badly retracted. You can see the turbine (very roughly) as it passes through that area.Is this badly redacted info (like we saw in some of the Epstein files) or is it just compression noise? (I just moved the midtone slider all the way left).
But atually, I already see something usefulTheretically, it would be possible to extract SOME information from this. But I think there's too much noise, and too much information removed for there to be anything useful.
I keep going back to this site as it's the only one that seems to make any sense. If you look at it in 3D view and have the North point at the 2 o'clock position like it is in the video It has two types of turbines seen in the same order as the video, and the second field closest to the camera resembles the end of the video with rows of 4 smaller turbines. BUT I can't get any kind of satisfactory alignment with the first field. It was built between April and Nov '23 and fully built by Jan 2024. Also, it's possible the substation was a floating rather than fixed structure.Actually, the windfarm slightly to the north includes a substation that could be the small building in the images,,,
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Although many of the windfarms there appear to have similar small substations amongst the turbines.