The object in the video looks like a designed projectile.
Did a meteor fly over Houston? See video of the streak in sky
Yeah, like an interior projectile exiting a casing.It did look a bit artificial, looked like something was fired or launched judging by the view from the last segment of video...Almost like something put on the brakes coming to a halt and fired a projectile or energy blast...Strange...
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Yeah, like an interior projectile exiting a casing.
At 0:06 while passing in front of the building it disappears proving it's in the distance and not a reflection. I do agree about the white lights towards the end appearing to have the same anomaly. It doesn't appear to be mounted to anything.I'd say it was a reflection in the window...….besides the color it looked just like the white glowing street lights later in the video.
At 0:06 while passing in front of the building it disappears proving it's in the distance and not a reflection. I do agree about the white lights towards the end appearing to have the same anomaly. It doesn't appear to be mounted to anything.
looking at daytime auroras. I had to explain that they were actually clouds in the stratosphere," says Blakley.
Polar stratospheric clouds are newsworthy because normally the stratosphere has no clouds at all. Home to the ozone layer, the stratosphere is arid and almost always transparent. Only when the temperature drops to a staggeringly cold -85C can sparse water molecules assemble themselves into icy stratospheric clouds. PSCs are far rarer than auroras.
"Local villagers in both Abisko and Kiruna who are more than 70 years old confirmed they have never seen anything of the size, scale, or intensity," reports Blakley. "At one point I would say that close to 25% of the sky was filled with the clouds. PSCs in previous winters have been closer to 1% or 2%."
A rectangular cloud engulfs the sky over Toronto on January 2, 2020.