By Alex Nitzberg. Updated: August 20, 2020 - 6:37pm
Russian cosmonaut Ivan Vagner on Thursday posted a video from the International Space Showing showing a time-lapse of the aurora borealis, but he also highlighted the presence of other points of interest in the footage.
In the video, a row of what appears to be several small dots of light briefly appear and then vanish again.
Vagner asked people on Twitter what they thought it could be: "At 9-12 seconds, 5 objects appear flying alongside with the same distance. What do you think those are? Meteors, satellites or…?"
Space guests, or how I filmed the new time-lapse.
— Ivan Vagner (@ivan_mks63) August 19, 2020
The peak of aurora borealis when passing over the Antarctic in Australia’s longitude, meaning in between them. However, in the video, you will see something else, not only the aurora. pic.twitter.com/Hdiej7IbLU
P.P.S. The information was brought to the notice of Roscosmos management, the materials were sent to TsNIIMash and the Space Research Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences for further analysis.
— Ivan Vagner (@ivan_mks63) August 19, 2020
He definitely saw a UFO - whatever it was was flying and is (so far) unidentified. Probably not an alien spacecraft, but some kind of natural phenomenon, but definitely unidentified and flying.
No comments:
Post a Comment