You cannot see a brown dwarf star you dimwit. They emit x-ray, gamma, and infrared light ONLY and reflect an extremely small amount of light back so you are literally looking for a black hole in black space. If you can see anything with the naked eye, you should immediately discredit it as false since you cant see or video tape this light spectrum with your Best Buy camera. Now if you had a microwave telescope....
I observed what I believe may be the same 'star' from Southern California in the very early A.M., visible in our SouthWest sky. This star is newly visible since mid-May of this year, and prior to that, only one star was visible at this time of the morning. If someone with strong astronomy experience and the right tools
could offer some insights on what that might be it would be much appreciated..
I'm seeing the same anomaly from southern California coast, but only around 4 - 5:45AM, then it's gone from view. Prior to late May of this year, only one star was visible in the sky at this hour.
If one of you with true astonomical experience could comment and/or provide some substantiation for what this might be, it would be helpful. I'm not good enough with the astronomy packages to use them and be certain of the results I might get..
Ok, download Stellarium, find your city, enter the date of capture and see what is the name of the star. Probably it's Venus, but better check it by yourself
You cannot see a brown dwarf star you dimwit. They emit x-ray, gamma, and infrared light ONLY and reflect an extremely small amount of light back so you are literally looking for a black hole in black space. If you can see anything with the naked eye, you should immediately discredit it as false since you cant see or video tape this light spectrum with your Best Buy camera. Now if you had a microwave telescope....
Sp33dyD3m0n 10 months ago
a star
VideoEditorNo1 2 years ago
If you still do not know what it is, the answer is above in my reply to TstAllTruth.
Relaxa, no es Nibiru! ;)
MrKyemin 2 years ago
It's not such a big deal in fact, and I bet you know it by now, but if you don't, I tell you.
The "star" that doesn't move is in fact a planet called Venus. You probably heard about it before.
And if you notice, the other "star" moves slowly, that's is becouse it's the ISS aka International Space Station. Enjoy it! ;)
MrKyemin 2 years ago
I observed what I believe may be the same 'star' from Southern California in the very early A.M., visible in our SouthWest sky. This star is newly visible since mid-May of this year, and prior to that, only one star was visible at this time of the morning. If someone with strong astronomy experience and the right tools
could offer some insights on what that might be it would be much appreciated..
TstAllTruth 2 years ago
I'm seeing the same anomaly from southern California coast, but only around 4 - 5:45AM, then it's gone from view. Prior to late May of this year, only one star was visible in the sky at this hour.
If one of you with true astonomical experience could comment and/or provide some substantiation for what this might be, it would be helpful. I'm not good enough with the astronomy packages to use them and be certain of the results I might get..
TstAllTruth 2 years ago
Ok, download Stellarium, find your city, enter the date of capture and see what is the name of the star. Probably it's Venus, but better check it by yourself
killerazazello 2 years ago
someone explain please, i see the same from Spain.
tranc3ify 2 years ago