who have used their 'scopes to take pictures of Mars that look amazingly unlike the official, red tinged NASA photos, showing an atmosphere remarkably similar to Earth's. In any event, whether or not we ever meet organic beings we can communicate with, the worlds themselves are a treat. I just want to walk on one and see everything with my own eyes. :)
The appearance of Mars' atmosphere will vary depending on the angle of observation and the wavelengths used. The blueish haze around the limb is a result of rayleigh scattering, which is not inherent only to Earth. It's what makes water appear blue as well.
And of course depending on the wavelength and colour calibration you use, you can get images of Mars that look very different from each other.
Simply, there is nothing about it that isn't publically available knowledge
They say that Beta Pictoris has a lot of carbon, which may mean there are planets with mountains made of diamonds. Damn I'd love to see that. Even if NASA made me swear to never tell anyone of the things that I saw, I'd jump at the chance. Sorry everyone, you'll have to remain in the dark. Don't think ill of me, I just want to write a sci-fi story at my own cabin in the diamond mountains.
You're correct about the carbon abundance of the disk. Mountains of diamonds seems quite unlikely though (heavy elements sink to a planet's interior). The carbon abundance isn't quite *that* high.
Other than this planet, no others have been found, so no one can really claim there are additional planets there with any certainty. That being said, there is some evidence for additional planets from the disk structure. Definitely exciting times ahead!
@Boy75402 Exciting times indeed, what with water turning up on the Moon, and Mars. Not to mention Europa's ocean under all that ice. Who's to say there isn't a city under there, too? Again, I have to use the NASA line: I'd keep quiet about the UFOs I saw as long as I could get a glimpse of those worlds. Keep up the good work with your videos.
If you truly saw UFOs no one's going to want you to be silent about it. NASA et al have been looking for signs of life elsewhere in the Universe for years (though at the moment, it's more technique refinement with the goal of life detection).
Though of course, if you got sent to β Pic, saw UFOs and came back, no one's going to believe you anyhow. "Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence."
You seem to be hinting NASA is hiding UFO info. If so, you're incorrect.
@Boy75402 I have no doubt NASA's been LOOKING, but I'm afraid I lack your faith in that institution as it is, sadly, a branch of the U.S. government. All of those astronauts were once military pilots from the Air Force. Anything government related is suspect, in my trying-not-to-sound-like-a-survivalist opinion. We've been betrayed by too many of our elected officials over the past 200 years for my tastes. If it's any consolation, I do believe the Moon landings happened.
It used to be the case where all the astronauts were part of the military, but that's largely not the case anymore. You can Wikipedia the recent several dozen Shuttle missions for examples.
While I agree that the government organisations are not exactly dependable, to believe they are hiding UFO evidence is a step away from rational suspicion and into wild unfounded speculation.
But it is reassuring that you acknowledge the moon landings :3
@Boy75402 The astronauts may be largely civilian now, but they still report to the higher ups who are appointed by government officials. And back during the Moon landings they were military and that's why I think there's been no real debate about what they may have seen up there. During the Apollo broadcasts they said code words and switched to channels that ham radio operators in the Nevada desert - who were monitoring the activities - could not access. Then there's the amateur astronomers
This has been flagged as spam show
Great clip - like the chronology too. Very well done - Thanks. :-)
Astrostevo 10 months ago
Great clip - like teh chronology too. Very well done - Thanks. :-)
Astrostevo 10 months ago
who have used their 'scopes to take pictures of Mars that look amazingly unlike the official, red tinged NASA photos, showing an atmosphere remarkably similar to Earth's. In any event, whether or not we ever meet organic beings we can communicate with, the worlds themselves are a treat. I just want to walk on one and see everything with my own eyes. :)
chainbluelightning1 1 year ago
@chainbluelightning1
The appearance of Mars' atmosphere will vary depending on the angle of observation and the wavelengths used. The blueish haze around the limb is a result of rayleigh scattering, which is not inherent only to Earth. It's what makes water appear blue as well.
And of course depending on the wavelength and colour calibration you use, you can get images of Mars that look very different from each other.
Simply, there is nothing about it that isn't publically available knowledge
Boy75402 1 year ago
They say that Beta Pictoris has a lot of carbon, which may mean there are planets with mountains made of diamonds. Damn I'd love to see that. Even if NASA made me swear to never tell anyone of the things that I saw, I'd jump at the chance. Sorry everyone, you'll have to remain in the dark. Don't think ill of me, I just want to write a sci-fi story at my own cabin in the diamond mountains.
chainbluelightning1 1 year ago
@chainbluelightning1
You're correct about the carbon abundance of the disk. Mountains of diamonds seems quite unlikely though (heavy elements sink to a planet's interior). The carbon abundance isn't quite *that* high.
Other than this planet, no others have been found, so no one can really claim there are additional planets there with any certainty. That being said, there is some evidence for additional planets from the disk structure. Definitely exciting times ahead!
Boy75402 1 year ago
@Boy75402 Exciting times indeed, what with water turning up on the Moon, and Mars. Not to mention Europa's ocean under all that ice. Who's to say there isn't a city under there, too? Again, I have to use the NASA line: I'd keep quiet about the UFOs I saw as long as I could get a glimpse of those worlds. Keep up the good work with your videos.
chainbluelightning1 1 year ago
@chainbluelightning1
If you truly saw UFOs no one's going to want you to be silent about it. NASA et al have been looking for signs of life elsewhere in the Universe for years (though at the moment, it's more technique refinement with the goal of life detection).
Though of course, if you got sent to β Pic, saw UFOs and came back, no one's going to believe you anyhow. "Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence."
You seem to be hinting NASA is hiding UFO info. If so, you're incorrect.
Boy75402 1 year ago
@Boy75402 I have no doubt NASA's been LOOKING, but I'm afraid I lack your faith in that institution as it is, sadly, a branch of the U.S. government. All of those astronauts were once military pilots from the Air Force. Anything government related is suspect, in my trying-not-to-sound-like-a-survivalist opinion. We've been betrayed by too many of our elected officials over the past 200 years for my tastes. If it's any consolation, I do believe the Moon landings happened.
chainbluelightning1 1 year ago
@chainbluelightning1
It used to be the case where all the astronauts were part of the military, but that's largely not the case anymore. You can Wikipedia the recent several dozen Shuttle missions for examples.
While I agree that the government organisations are not exactly dependable, to believe they are hiding UFO evidence is a step away from rational suspicion and into wild unfounded speculation.
But it is reassuring that you acknowledge the moon landings :3
Boy75402 1 year ago
@Boy75402 The astronauts may be largely civilian now, but they still report to the higher ups who are appointed by government officials. And back during the Moon landings they were military and that's why I think there's been no real debate about what they may have seen up there. During the Apollo broadcasts they said code words and switched to channels that ham radio operators in the Nevada desert - who were monitoring the activities - could not access. Then there's the amateur astronomers
chainbluelightning1 1 year ago
Nice work! Good to see something on Youtube you can learn from.
Captainvideo54 1 year ago
@Captainvideo54
Haha thanks. Glad you enjoyed it =)
Boy75402 1 year ago