I think the object's apparent motion is not caused, at least not primarily, by a parallax effect.
The object appears to maintain a relatively constant apparent speed, regardless of how fast the background is moving, including moments when the...
A parachuting flare is a proposed hypothesis that fits the visuals at first glance; however, it may be a good example of dynamic pareidolia, instead of "nonsense", or a reason for embarrassment. Other hypotheses are that the "parachute" might...
So moving forward from the parachute nonsense (a good example of type 2 error, and confirmation bias of "skeptics" IMHO) .
The line in the image that is perhaps a contrail seems to me to indicate that the object is in fact moving. The camera...
It is indeed possible that the object in the video is an inspection drone used by offshore wind farms, and from an engineering and maintenance perspective, this is currently a more reasonable explanation than a "high-speed anomalous craft."...
Nice stitch :)
But not a single frame in the entire video shows the dot moving behind the windmills - it's just dimmed because of the chanced background when moving past them.
Possible mechanism: tiny particles like pollen or dust on the camera's front window get coated in ice at altitude, and when the window's anti-icing heater cycles on, the ice flashes to vapor in uneven puffs that thrust the particle around the...
Looking at the footage, DOW-UAP-PR48, Unresolved UAP Report, INDOPACOM, 2024
https://www.war.gov/UFO/#DOW-UAP-PR48-Unresolved-UAP-Report-INDOPACOM-2024
there appears to be at least two small features of increased brightness associated with the...
A parachuting flare is a proposed hypothesis that fits the visuals at first glance; however, it may be a good example of dynamic pareidolia, instead of "nonsense", or a reason for embarrassment. Other hypotheses are that the "parachute" might...
The camera system it was determined this was filmed by is, as far as the public knows, exclusively hosted on aircraft. However much motion the thing being imaged has on its own, if the line is something in the scene, it should be moving plenty...
I think the object's apparent motion is not caused, at least not primarily, by a parallax effect.
The object appears to maintain a relatively constant apparent speed, regardless of how fast the background is moving, including moments when the...