ID | #1559588795 |
Added | Mon, 03/06/2019 |
Author | July N. |
Sources | |
Phenomena | |
Status | Result
|
Resume |
Initial data
For several nights in late October, Alf Haugan observed strong yellow-white light, sometimes within a few hours.
From an eyewitness:
I see it every night. I don't know what it is, but it's not a star and not a satellite. It is less of the moon. It sometimes is stationary and sometimes moving, even rotating on its axis.
Usually this phenomenon is most noticeable in the early morning. From four to seven hours.
It can be described as cigar-shaped UFO with wings-crescents.
The witness even filmed the object, anxiously awaiting the results, but after developing the film could not see anything.
From the report of the FOTOCAT Report # 4:
The 25th day of the planet Venus rose in the Eastern horizon at 04: 10, and 07: 00. Its height was about 18 degrees. The rising of the sun (and daylight) was about 08:40, and Venus disappeared from view for about an hour before.
We find that the confusion with the planet Venus is the most likely explanation.
Translated by «Yandex.Translator»
Original news
October 1972, 04:00 – Trondheim During several nights late in October, Alf Haugan observed a strong yellowwhite light, sometimes for several hours at a time. I see it every night. I don’t know what it is, but it’s not a star or a satellite. It is smaller than the moon, sometimes it is stationary, and sometimes it is moving, even rotating around its own axis. The phenomenon was usually most visible in the early morning hours from four to seven, and it was described as a cigar-shaped UFO with half-moon wings. He even filmed the object, waited anxiously for the results, but after development there was nothing on the film. On the 25th, the planet Venus rose in the eastern horizon at 04:10, and by 07:00 its elevation was 18º approximately. Sunrise (and daylight) was around 08:40, and Venus would have disappeared from view around an hour before that. We find that the confusion with the planet Venus is the most likely explanation.
Hypotheses
Investigation
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The heavenly bodies
The brightest heavenly bodies in the sky are Venus, Jupiter, and sometimes Mars and, of course, the Moon.
Venus is the bright yellow of the evening or morning star, shining in the sky on the background of evening or dawn. Maximum brightness of Venus can reach up to 4.3 m, and she is the third brightness of the sun in earth's sky after the sun and the moon. It so well reflects the light of the Sun that it is relatively easy to see and day, especially if you know the location. It manifests itself in the form of tiny blinking white dots.
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