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ArcticMyst Security by Avery

Weapon to reach out of atmosphere?

Joined
Jan 29, 2014
Messages
12,031
Points
113
Ben, I have no disagreement with anything in your last post, for that matter, anything I've seen you post yet.

Steve, I have issues with many of the so called skeptics today, they aren't, they just want to disagree and have closed minds. A real skeptic does not do that, they have open minds to see alternative views, not closed minds to shut down alternative views. I suppose the whole thing is a yin-yang anyway, the white or black sides depending upon where you stand.

Hey, here's something I want to share on LPF show and tell:

Ruby Laser Assembly from a Hughes Rangefinder - this could be viewed from outside our atmosphere, but shoot anything down, not

cb4c1626-7123-44fc-ab04-c219212ebe00.png


- Now I will be master of the world, I have a 1 megawatt peak power laser now, be afraid, be very afraid.... I know I am, this thing can be very hazardous if not handled properly.

Test data: 50 mJ at a PFN voltage of 1,095 VDC.

Output pulse power: 1 MW minimum.
Test data: 1.4 megwatt based on 50 mJ pulse energy divided by 35 ns pulse duration.

Lasing medium: Synthetic ruby rod, 1/4" x 3". Rod ends are polished and AR coated. The common dopant being Cr2O3, 0.05% by weight.
Pump source: Linear xenon flashlamp EG&G model FX-103C-3 or its replacement FXQ-1302-3. Here are the specifications for the FXQ-1302-3:
Bore diameter (ID): 0.157 inches/4 mm.
Arc length: 3 inches/76 mm.
Total length: 5.56 inches/141.2 mm.
Ko impedance parameter: 24.3 ohms-amp0.5.
Minimum flashing voltage: 600 VDC.
Maximum average power 150 W (convection cooled), 300 W (forced air).
Minimum trigger voltage: 12 KV (series), 15 KV (external).
Explosion energy: 360 J (100 us), 1,170 J (1 ms).
Cavity: Highly reflective, semi-elliptical cavity. The rod is conformally clamped in place over its entire lower providing for effective conduction cooling. The flash lamp is held only by its ends and is not quite in contact with the cavity so cooling is mostly via convection.
 
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Joined
Jan 29, 2012
Messages
3,164
Points
113
Sorry, but that did not look like an electrical discharge to me. Aside from the fact that it wasnt flared, or forked and was narrow and focused, what ever it was was travelling along a set trajectory. No idea what it was but it was very interesting to see the unidentified object change course so quickly...just beforehand. :beer:
 

Benm

0
Joined
Aug 16, 2007
Messages
7,896
Points
113
Such one-time videos are a bit problematic when it comes to explaining what you see.

One problem is their resolution/quality is limited to begin with, but you're also looking at something from a single specific angle.

Perhaps i can be a bit of a skeptic by nature, but i'm always open to evidence. I'm skeptical in the sense that the further fetched some idea sounds, the stronger the evidence for it as to be to convince me. If you want to convince me that a cat can run at 35 mp/h i'll almost take your word for that, and be fine with a blurry video that demonstrates it. If you want to convince me that aliens are walking on earth right now i'll probably demand you deliver me a living specimen. If it was me you had to convice you might have a harder time catching that cat compared to the alien, but then again, who cares what i'm conviced off or not ;)

These sprites above thunderstoms for example seem to be something observed by multiple people over a long period of time. This makes it at least likely that they are a real phenomenon, regardless of how they actually work.

The benefit of all that is that we can actually study it: we know thunderstorms are not that rare, we have weather prediction models that allows us to predict where one is likely to occur, and we have equipment to investigate them from surface, air and space.

The only thing stopping a random person from investigating them in detail is cost. Some blue light blasting out the far end of a thunderstorm, apparently doing little harm in the way, is not something you'd get huge amounts of funding for to research.
 
Joined
Jan 12, 2008
Messages
3,290
Points
83
What makes you assume that it is a weapon? What's the context of this footage?

It doesn't look like anything, honestly. There is no sense of scale.
 
Joined
Jan 29, 2014
Messages
12,031
Points
113
Some individuals theorize a weapon was being shoot at a UFO in this video. I've seen this same video on YouTube a few times with such speculations.
 
Joined
Jan 12, 2008
Messages
3,290
Points
83
What makes people think it's a shot of space? Who took this footage, where, and when? I can see how people like to theorize about this when it is so vague. Not a very scientific approach.
 

Benm

0
Joined
Aug 16, 2007
Messages
7,896
Points
113
Well yeah, that would not be the most likely theory to come to mind to me either.

Then again the scientific method is rare when it comes to poeple seeing these things, and 'it cannot be explained on the basis of the little evidence we have' doesn't even come to mind. This is often an important thing: lack of information.

You can be easily fooled by a magic trick done by some guy on a stage.

Film that performance from many angles with highspeed camera's and you'll probably be able to work out where a card went, how some girl appeared in a box, or to see a bullet actually flies before the magician catches it with his teeth.

Magic tricks are obviously illusions done on purpose and designed to confuse, but we are also sensitive to the same principles when it comes to this we cannot explain right away.

For millenia people have believed that lightning was caused by gods, only discoveries in the last few hundred years have proven that explanation wrong.
 




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