XPost: alt.astronomy   
   From: kym@kymhorsell.com   
      
   In alt.astronomy Siri Cruise wrote:   
   > In article ,   
   > Daniel65 wrote:   
   >   
   >> MrPostingRobot@kymhorsell.com wrote on 6/10/22 12:13 am:   
   >> > The Debbrief reports there has been "considerable reaction"   
   >> > to a preprint of a paper by a group of Ukiranian astronomers   
   >> > announcing measurments of "unknown objects" they saw flying   
   >> > in the daytime sky over Kyiv and nerby regions.   
   >> "preprint"?? Is that something like printing something yet to be   
   >> written?? ;-P   
   > Lots of things in the sky over Kiev in recent months.   
      
   I like the debunking site speculating it was insects.   
   But you have to explain everything in the paper -- the   
   tendency for the objects seen to flash at high frequency and   
   move in proportion to the speed of flashing; the spectra of   
   the light to be something other than sunlight; and then the ranges.   
   Of course the paper was a preprint so everything was rough calcs   
   but very much in line with what you can extract out of space telescope   
   data or during the lockdowns could see nightly parade across the sky   
   being chased by (in Australia) light aircraft trying to look inconspicuous   
   with large flashing LED arrays strapped on top and underneath the fuselage.   
      
   At some point people had to accept there were germs, there are   
   greehouse gases and there are electrons. But it takes a while.   
   For some 100s of years and they still dont accept these things.   
      
   --   
   [Debunking Special R?]   
   The only problem is you can't do arithmetic,   
   Einstein's calculation is tau = t * sqrt(1-v^2/c^2),   
   ref: http://www.fourmilab.ch/etexts/einstein/specrel/www/figures/img61.gif   
   2.2usec * sqrt(1-0.999^2) = 0.098362 usec [OOPS!]   
   and NOT the measured 64 usec.   
    -- "Androcles" , 30 Dec 2010 10:53:02 -0000   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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