tsig
a carbon based life-form
- Joined
- Nov 25, 2005
- Messages
- 39,049
I'll just put all the bits and pieces together here in one place. Please read it carefully ... it answers the question(s) and why it's nearly impossible for it to have been a cloud ... so one more time ... the detailed version:
From the ground position the object would always seem to be at nearly the same heading. The smoke trail that originally caught Johnson's attention would have dissipated into haze leaving only the silhouette of the receding aircraft in view in his 8 power binoculars. The issue of not seeing the process of dissipation can be explained by taking into account that the cloud had already formed before Johnson noticed it so Johnson didn't know how long it had been there, which means when he first saw it, it had already begun to dissipate, but as the sun had gone down it was getting steadily darker and the changing light and distance could temporarily compensate for the thinning. Then by the time he went inside, got the binoculars, went back outside, got the binoculars into position and focused on the object, the smoke could have dissipated into the haze he saw, leaving the silhouetted aircraft receding into the distance.
From the airborne observers position(s). When they first spotted the object they may have also been looking at the smoke cloud in the same place Johnson saw it, and if the aircraft that made it was in the process of circling once or twice, the cloud would seem dark and disk or wing like, and hovering ... and the aircraft itself would be obscured.
Then as the airborne observers changed heading toward it, they would be moving steadily closer, and the cloud would be dissipating into haze leaving the now closer and consequently larger aircraft sharply visible. Then as the mystery aircraft started heading west, the airborne observers who were now following it would be making a slow turn away from the position of the cloud, all the while keeping the mystery aircraft dead ahead of them, giving the impression that it was always at the same bearing. We know this had to be the case because the airborne observers lost sight of the object after they had turned toward it ( northerly ), but the object had departed almost due west away from them some minutes later.
To reinforce ... we know the mystery object was near Point Mugu because the initial intersections of the two lines of sight on the object are in that area. So for the approaching Warning Star coming from the south toward Point Mugu to end up facing almost due west, while maintaining a steady bearing on a lenticular cloud, would by necessity mean the lenticular cloud would had to have been moving at some considerable speed on a westerly heading, all the while maintaining a perfect shape. On the other hand, if the cloud had simply dissipated, creating the illusion of movement, the Warning Star would still have been heading north toward Point Mugu when the object disappeared. Is that clear enough?
[qimg]http://ufopages.com/Mugu-01a.jpg[/qimg]
He was inside when he first saw it. Your account of this incident is growing more and more detailed* as time goes by, unfortunately the details are wrong.
*sort of like another account.(fire flies)