Friday, February 15, 2013
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Join Us On Facebook?
Please Wait 5 Seconds...Skip
Trending Articles
-
WOAH this is great. Watch the live stream State of the union and wait for anonymous to hijack the signal? Or will it crash? or nothing? is...
-
For over 15 years scientists have used data gathered by U.S. satellites of natural fireball events in Earth's atmosphere... but no more!...
-
Loads of sourced info in description of this video on youtube. Ready for number 2? http://wewillblowyourmind.blogspot.co.uk/2013/01/zei...
-
Smoking cannabis DOES NOT damage the lungs. After over 20 years of in depth study, cannabis has been found to protect the lungs, enta...
-
Burger King has tonight admitted that it has been selling burgers and Whoppers containing horsemeat despite two weeks of denials. The fa...
-
This is the most mind blowing short film you will ever watch!
-
This is a Call to Action for a Non-Hierarchical Occupation of Monsanto Everywhere Whether you like it or not, chances are Monsanto contamin...
-
The federal reserve has no gold. Gaddafi was killed because he wanted a gold backed currency. The fiat (paper, backed by nothing) money kin...
how are they changing directions? all these are not meteors...duh..
ReplyDeletenasa plugged their old atari tenis in
Delete"meteors" eh
ReplyDeleteokay wtf rocks dont stop than change direction
ReplyDeletewhen they collide with eachother it changes its course
Deletehmmm maybe a more experienced star gazer can tell us why there moving in different directions ?
ReplyDeleteon a loop
ReplyDeleteMaybe the object is leaving the field of vision and they have to move the scope to replace follow the meteor and put it back in the field of vision? *Not an experienced star gazer* :)
ReplyDeletemaaaaybe gravitational pull?? o_0....
ReplyDeleteIt seems to be moving in a circle and not in different directions...
ReplyDeletethe reason it looks like its going backwards is because the telescope is moving to keep catching the asteroid
ReplyDeleteThe camera is just moved from time to time..
ReplyDeleteIts the lens adjusting
ReplyDeleteWhen the meteor reaches the end of the camera's view, the camera adjusts to follow the meteor. It creates a light trail just like if you would be trying to take a still photo of it with a camera that doesn't photograph objects in motion well. You can also see a light trail from the stars in the background as well every time the camera moves.The meteor isn't moving backwards. As cool as it would be to see a UFO, that is not it.
ReplyDeleteIVE SEEN TWO UFO'S if i dont write back, its because i dont think its a ufo
DeleteNo need to be rude.
ReplyDeletehow is this live if it says its from 2012 Gingin australia ?
ReplyDeleteMore action watch "Atari's" asteroid!
ReplyDelete