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Flat Plane 2020

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Clearly The Moon is in Water

  - 1:40

This footage was taken last night on the 28th of October 2020! The Nikon P900 was locked on a tripod using maximum optical and digital zoom. What you see is the actual speed the Moon is traveling!


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Uploaded 4 years ago  

October 29th 2020  

File Size: 33 MB

Category: Technology & Science







12 Comments

walter

- 3 years ago  

its a plasma projection of the sun which is an electrical conductor.

oldmanvollox

- 3 years ago  

guessing the fluid is beer about three six packs

LittleDee

- 3 years ago  

Why is the sun and moon clearly round but the earth is flat? Get a grip!!!!

cedler

- 3 years ago  

Atmnospheric diffraction.

Volkner

- 3 years ago  

Is there a way to block a channel here on NewTube? This 'Flat Plane' moron is 75% of all videos on every page I look it. I'd like to remove the crazies from my feed. Is there a way?

UK Mike

- 3 years ago  

Fucking hell, the world is full of fucking morons. This effect is caused by the heat from the earth distorting the image.

JazzFan98

- 3 years ago  

Let them be morons! No reason to get upset about it. It certainly looks like the light of the moon is being mediated through an imperfect fluid.

MDS

- 3 years ago  

👍

Tim7of7

- 3 years ago  

Keep dreaming the earth isn't flat.

Erotic Stories

- 4 years ago  

I'm open to that but, yesterday i sat and watched all he clouds drifting behind the moon... How is that possible, 1 if it's in water 2. If its 245,000 miles away which is also absurd.

Dragon Slayer Intel

- 4 years ago  

If you get a chance, zoom in on Aristarchus, and watch it for changes. Also I have seen really long straight shadows across the moon, like 1/16 of the whole disk. In winter of 2008 was the last time I saw the shadows. Lost telescope 2010. Celestron C8

Recursion Again?

- 4 years ago  

I'm not going to say it isn't possible. I've seen this with the Nikon P900 star and planet images too. But it isn't "clearly" truth. You'd have to look into the camera's design to dismiss that as a cause. Or maybe use the same zoom strength to examine some other object of know solidity. But that might be hard to do. Also make sure that it isn't caused by maybe looking through that much air with varying temperatures. I'm not an expert in any of those areas.