A screenshot? Or the video?Marik sent me this
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A screenshot of the original video on his phone, zoomed in a bit.A screenshot? Or the video?
I'd asked him for a frame that showed the right side, so I could see what was cropped off and also to see what the differences in pixel quality was. But this is just a small jpg from a phone screenshot via Twitter, so not useful for the latter.A screenshot of the original video on his phone, zoomed in a bit.
He also told this story:
That's, oddly, a more precise estimate than the UFO distance estimate. If you combine them, it puts the "clearly" plane at 11-16 miles away. There are not really any good candidates for that. Although there's two Southwest 737s at about 17NM. Which would look somethings like:External Quote:And, you know, the, I believe it was the the junior officer of the deck was just saying, hey, you know, nah, that was just an aircraft. It was just an aircraft, typical, you know, 747, and I said, Sir, did you see wings? Did you see, you know, anything protruding from the craft that indicated a silhouette of a typical aircraft? And he was like, Yeah, well, it's because we're so far away from the aircraft that it seems to look like a tic tac. So I said, okay, sir, got it, I would say maybe 20 seconds pass. 20 seconds pass, and I go back to my radar, and I'm just looking around, and I tell the CSM, I said, slew over to a certain degree, and I forget the degree, and he slews over to an Air Contact that I know is an Air Contact. And I tell them, zoom in. Now, I just mentioned that there's a curtain that separates ICC one from the bridge, but the bridge has the same monitors that we have, so they can see what we're doing from the bridge, and you can change like channels so they can see certain pictures that are being displayed in ICC one. So they're already displaying the Sapphire camera on one of the multiple monitors on the bridge. So when I tell them to slew over, I say, OD. Do you see what this Air Contact looks like? This Air Contact was maybe five, six nautical miles further than what we witnessed the tic tacs, and you can clearly see the wings. You can see the propulsion. You can see the propulsion like when on a hot summer day. Being from Las Vegas. George Knapp, I'm sure you know what that is. You can see that hot propulsion, um, from the aircraft. And I told the the J, O, D, I said, like, what do you have to say? Now, you know, because it it was funny to me that I was able to disprove his skepticism, like within 20 seconds, that what we witnessed was probably an airplane. We were just zoomed in so far that it just looked like a small tic tac, but disproved like within 2030 seconds, and he didn't really say anything after that. He just kind of chuckled
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I agree, and I'm somewhat surprised Lehto (a pilot) thinks otherwise. Altitude is usually given in hundreds (FL220) or thousands (22,000) of feet.Lehto thinks 22,000 ft is the slant range to the object, but it's most likely the altitude of that Southwest flight.
This OSD is different, but still uses a small cross for the thermal cue.External Quote:
4.8.2.11 Thermal Cue
Indicates an area that has a different thermal signature than the area surrounding it.
Just for the record, Marik now says that there was an ocean current heading 300° (at unknown speed) but theoretically this could account for the ship heading being 050° and the lat long track being closer to 028°. I created the following image with my basic sailing knowledge and vector mathematics.
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I've checked arth.nullschool.net/ and the ocean current was close to this heading.
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https://earth.nullschool.net/#2023/...aphic=-118.62,33.21,12581/loc=-118.151,32.909
We can work out the speed of the ship from From Mick's post #7 .... distace travelled is 0.06778 km in 35 seconds, so speed = 6.97 kmh = 3.763499 knots. The speed of the current is 0.05ms which is 0.09719222 knots , which is practically zero, so its hard to understand how such a light current could affect such a large ship so much.
With the date on this one, do we have the KMLs for every possible airliner in the area at the time? At some point they may not be available.