CSETI Night Vision Video - Very Bright Pulsating ET Craft, Mt. Shasta, CA - 2009

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Uploaded by on Aug 12, 2010

A very bright, pulsating ET craft responds to hand-held laser signaling from the ground. This video was captured in the night sky of Mount Shasta, CA at a CSETI workshop in 2009.

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  • It moves like a sattelite

  • I would say this is more likely a plane rather than a satellite. I think this because the intervals on the flashing light is exactly the same regardless of when the laser is used. I am a great believer in UFO's but I don't believe this is anything other than a plane flying at night with its navigation lights flashing. The fact that it shows up as a single light is purely the the night vision flaring the underside light that stays on through out the flight on m ost planes.

  • This might aswell be a satelit...

  • they are real good catch!!!

  • I see these all the time in the night sky. Good work. Definitely UFO's.

  • I recorded a similar object, the video is on youtube as watch?v=fz3t_wNpIXM (channel jeffmbecker, video DoubleFlash) Also on this video is a recording of an aircraft for comparison. The difference should be obvious. I did check the satellite schedules using Heavens Above and this object was not on the list. I also have a video called Helios 1B that shows a typical satellite flare, similar to an Iridium flare.

  • its a nuclear Space craft

  • @davidljung2 I guess the pulsating that occurred every 6th count must have been timed according to the rotation? Would a reflection be so perfectly timed? Seems to be programmed to me? I don't know???

  • @darksurvivor00 I am also a professional VFX and After Effects artist and I have to admit that this has nothing to do with VFX. You should learn more about CSETI before making such comments.

  • @VonGammel - the word 'satellite' doesn't mean only man-made objects. Since Norad is currently tracking in excess of 20,000 objects and there are many many more that are smaller and/or farther away that are not tracked, there could easily be over a million, but that's just a wild guess. When man-made satellites collide, which they have on occasion, they explode into a lot of tiny pieces. Like Norad says, "what goes up must come down" (and a lot of stuff comes down from elsewhere in space too)

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