JayUtah
Penultimate Amazing
I'm no expert, but wouldn't a helicopter at something like 5000' AGL be pretty quiet?
Yes; that's high enough that rotor noise could be lost in background noise.
I'm no expert, but wouldn't a helicopter at something like 5000' AGL be pretty quiet?
Helicopters have flashing lights on them...
I do not think so, I discounted a weather balloon for the same reason. The object moved and stopped at regular intervals.
In 1957 I went out into the garden in Kent to watch for sputnik one. I heard it was due to pass overhead so I waited for it at night time. I was watching for a while and while I was looking at the stars I noticed one had changed position in relation to the nearby stars. I started watching it and it moved slowly along, then stopped. It stopped for a minute or two then moved off again. This happened several times before it disappeared from view. It looked like just another star and it moved systematically and stopped and moved again at regular intervals. I am absolutely certain it was not a helicopter as it was soundless, and it could not have been a weather balloon as it moved and stopped regularly. It could not have been a U2 spy plane as I don't think they could hover. I have no explanation as to what it was so I call it a UFO. An unidentified flying object.
Not long after it disappeared sputnik one flew over, and it was brighter and faster than the object I saw, and sputnik moved smoothly across the sky in a couple of minutes.
I would love to know what this object was, anyone got any ideas?
All things considered (including the time period and the time of night you would have been out looking for the satellite) I think the most likely explanation is a high-altitude balloon. The movement of objects in a dark sky are very difficult to judge. If not for the star background you would not have been able to tell for sure whether it was ever moving or not. (Research simulating such visual conditions results in observers reporting completely stationary lights as making all sorts of maneuvers). With the star background, it would seem to be stationary when not close to any stars, and moving when it passed near a star for reference. And keep in mind that the stars themselves move in relation to the night sky (not really, of course, it's the earth rotating).
Remember this was something so faint that most of us wouldn't have been able to see it!
The object stopped as you remember it, 59 years later.I do not think so, I discounted a weather balloon for the same reason. The object moved and stopped at regular intervals.
And at the same time, relatively quickly.Nonsense. Of course stars move, just very slowly.
And at the same time, relatively quickly.
It's Kent.Lots of airports,lots of aircraft, and a good chance it only appeared to hover because it was travelling towards, or away from the viewer, not across their field of view.
Bit off topic, but are you the same TomTomKent from the Casebook forums?
Yup.