ID | #1570524671 |
Added | Tue, 08/10/2019 |
Author | July N. |
Sources | |
Phenomena | |
Status | Hypothesis
|
Initial data
An eyewitness from Bergen op Zoom observed a yellow glowing object in the sky ("like an incandescent bulb"). He stopped for a while and then disappeared at great speed to the South.
It was absolutely not a plane, satellite or shooting star. I don't have that distance, but he know where you would normally see (long distance) flying aircraft. Or satellites. But the satellite is less light. The field was larger and yellowish, while hanging in place, and then flew away at great speed.
The field did not leave footprints. The weather was clear. I also saw stars.
Translated by «Yandex.Translator»
Original news
BERGEN OP ZOOM, NB — Gele bol licht. Hing een tijdje stil. En verdween toen met hoge snelheid richting het Zuiden. Het was absoluut geen vliegtuig, satelliet of vallende ster.
Ik ben een leek en heb niet zo’n idee van afstanden. Maar het was op de hoogte waar je normaliter (lange afstanden) vliegtuigen ziet vliegen. Of een satelliet. Maar een satelliet is een kleiner lichtje. De bol was groter en gelig, hing een tijdje stil en schoot toen weg met hoge snelheid. De bol liet geen spoor achter.
Het weer was helder. Ik zag ook sterren.
Hypotheses
Satellite

Ordinary satellites, which often look like single, not very bright luminous dots moving smoothly in the night sky, are quite often mistaken for UFOs. After the Starlink satellites (near-Earth satellite systems developed by SpaceX, in order to create a cheap and high-performance satellite Internet communication channel and technical transmitters for receiving and transmitting signals from earth and orbit) were launched, it became possible to observe groups of satellites (up to 60 pieces) flying one after another.
Investigation
Resume
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