Bizarre Expanding Light Halo Seen By Hawaii Webcam
The Bad Astronomer writes "A webcam mounted at the CFHT observatory in Hawaii caught a strange, expanding halo of light on the night of June 22. Announced on the Starship Asterisk forum, readers quickly honed in on the likely culprit: the terminal charge from the third stage of a Minuteman III missile. Very similar to the Norway Spiral of 2009, and scientific sleuthing at its best!"
And by the look of it, the summary is wrong. According to the forum, it's hinted that it's not a Minuteman III ICBM but a Waverider scramjet cruise missile.
Correct me if I'm wrong, Hawaii isn't where the MM III tests are generally launched from - I was under the impression it was from Guam.
http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/2011/06/29/awesomely-weird-expanding-halo-of-light-seen-from-hawaii/ Another link on said pretty thing that reads better than the forum.
No I think that has been ruled out (the Waverider scramjet cruise missile), basically because the Waverider test took place on March 22, 2011 -- however the timestamps on the video are June 22, 2011 (a mistake of dates in Ichi Tanaka's email).
6/22/2011 - VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. -- A scheduled unarmed operational test Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile launch occurred at 6:35 a.m. June 22 from Launch Facility-10 here
A few of the apod.com forum users came up with the likely explanation that the effect is due to an ICBM launch from Vandenberg AFB. The timestamp of the video (accounting for time zone difference) and the Eastward direction of observation correlate with this explanation.
Someone forgot to press the button.
Now suddenly, I have a cutie mark. Go figure.
Honesty. Loyalty. Kindness. Laughter. Generosity. Magic!
By actually reading the article, I was convinced it is, in fact, the unarmed Minuteman III moving from Vandenburg to Kwajalein. The time, direction, and appearance match up with the terminal stage burnout.
The preceding comment is my own, and in no way construes an opinon of the Emperor of Mankind.
The email states the effect was witnessed MARCH 22, not July 22, which is when the missile launch was scheduled.
The Event -we blew an entire season trying to come up with something epic to fit the show name, and in the end, we phoned in the best idea somebody had and then we all went to Taco Bell for lunch and also to look for a new job.
Seriously. The actual 'event' was ludicrous and fucking stupid. It's a good thing nobody was actually watching or they'd feel cheated.
Sig for hire.
It would be even cooler if people would take 2 minutes to read TFA before posting:
The event was captured by the Subaru Catwalk Night Camera and also by
CHFT's NNW webcam
Videos from both cameras are in the article.
That's a mighty big "tiny dot of condensation" if it can affect two cameras at once!
So if this was caused by a missile, does that mean that life really is this awesome!?
...and I, for one, will welcome our bug-eyed monster overlords. After all, this is obviously the light halo of an extraterrestrial FTL spaceship, not a "missile" at all...
rgb
Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
All the info you need is in the summary links - yes, two astronomers saw it with their own eyes. (and night vision equipment, and obviously the two cameras in two differing locations that you don't trust)
Eh.. that's basically the formula of "Lost." And looking at Abrams' wikipedia page I can see a number of shows that started off looking like they'd be good stories and then screwed up the ending because they clearly didn't know what they were going to do until five minutes before they started filming.
Heck, alias did this on a per-episode basis...
Can you be Even More Awesome?!
The Waverider was delayed until June, but it could have been either as the Miniteman was launched from CA towards HI.
APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
Some years back, a friend and I were reclined in the backyard looking straight up. We saw a light that expanded in a circular fashion to about half the size of the full moon, then it went away just as fast. I tried to search on google to see if anyone else in the area had noticed it, but could not figure out how to type such a thing into google. To this day I do not know for sure what it was. That night we assumed it was a meteor that was burning through the atmosphere and headed straight for us, that fizzled out (and I found this disconcerting).
I was mainly curious how common this phenomenon was.
I come here for the love