Hadn't seen t hose before, but they do seem rather interesting, now that you mention it. Wonder what causes those?rduke wrote:Notice the cloud ring?
Regards,
~Michael Gmirkin
Hadn't seen t hose before, but they do seem rather interesting, now that you mention it. Wonder what causes those?rduke wrote:Notice the cloud ring?
Yes, these images fit the description of plasmoids.rduke wrote:Well these "objects" are fairly large...
To me it is a plasma event...
and from the same link, Bostick is quoted:A plasmoid is a coherent structure of plasma and magnetic fields. Plasmoids have been proposed to explain natural phenomena such as ball lightning,[2] magnetic bubbles in the magnetosphere,[3] and objects in cometary tails,[4] in the solar wind,[5][6] in the solar atmosphere,[7] and in the heliospheric current sheet. Plasmoids produced in the laboratory include field-reversed configurations, spheromaks, and the dense plasma focus
http://www.plasma-universe.com/index.php/Plasmoid
Bostick's original article:Winston H. Bostick wrote:The plasma is emitted not as an amorphous blob, but in the form of a torus. We shall take the liberty of calling this toroidal structure a plasmoid, a word which means plasma-magnetic entity. The word plasmoid will be employed as a generic term for all plasma-magnetic entities.
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solrey wrote:I swear I see a circular 'footprint' matching, and just to the right of, that cloud ring in the brighter area near the center of the auroral sheet!
Kind of reminds me of the electric 'footprint' of Io on Jupiter's polar ring.
MGmirkin wrote:rduke wrote:Notice the cloud ring?
Hadn't seen t hose before, but they do seem rather interesting, now that you mention it. Wonder what causes those?
Regards,
~Michael Gmirkin
In which case, why would someone try to photo it?John Silver wrote:Actually, the photo is exposed from inside the car and it is the flash reflected in the window.
Typical for many "UFO" photos.
hi web,webolife wrote:Sorry to disappoint the rampant electric discharge theorists in previous posts, but that photo of the alleged "cloud ring" shown with the beautiful auroral display in the background is a famous old space photo of the Manacougan Crater in Ontario.
Finally, their most salient characteristic is the annular shape of defocused areas of the image, giving a doughnut-shaped 'iris blur'or bokeh, caused by the shape of the entrance pupil.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catadioptric
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It looks more like he was taking a picture of the volcano and surrounding landscape.neilwilkes wrote:In which case, why would someone try to photo it?John Silver wrote:Actually, the photo is exposed from inside the car and it is the flash reflected in the window.
Typical for many "UFO" photos.
If it's the flash of the camera, there would have been nothing visible to want to photograph in the first place - ergo it cannot be.
The light had to be there before the shot was taken.
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