Kimberly (8
Aug 2012)
"UFO's, Unknown
Objects Transiting the Sun, and a Big Solar Storm"
Hello John and Doves,
The first two articles, from
"The Blaze" are from 2011. They seem to go
hand-in-hand with the articles about Vulcan and
unknown transits of the Sun.
A few days ago, I was looking
at events from 1859 (153 years ago), and noticed that an
astronomer had discovered
a planet between the Sun and
Mercury. I linked to the article about Vulcan and
found that he really didn't discover a planet,
but he may have very well
observed something. The article on Vulcan is long,
so I only showed a few paragraphs from it.
Then, the last thing, is "The
Carrington Event" that happened 5 months after the
astronomer observed the object crossing the Sun.
I wonder if these two events
are related?
So, the articles are about UFO's, unknown
objects transiting the Sun, and a big solar storm.
Proof
of an Alien Cover-Up? YouTube User‘s Wild Theory That NASA
Is ’Trying to Stop Us From Looking at the Sun’
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/proof-of-an-alien-cover-up-youtube-users-wild-theory-that-nasa-is-trying-to-stop-us-from-looking-at-the-sun/
The video with this article
has some bad language in it, so you may want to mute
it as you watch. The article explains what
happens.
UFO or Photo Flub? ‘Crazy’ Object Appears Next to Mercury
in a Blast of Solar Wind
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/ufo-or-photo-flub-crazy-object-appears-next-to-mercury-in-a-blast-of-solar-wind/
Vulcan was a small planet proposed to exist in an orbit between Mercury and the Sun. In an attempt to explain
peculiarities of Mercury's orbit, in the 19th-century French mathematician Urbain
Jean Joseph Le Verrier hypothesized that they were the result of
another planet, which he named Vulcan. No such planet was ever
found, and Mercury's orbit has now been explained by Albert Einstein's theory of general relativity.
Lescarbault described
in detail how, on 26 March 1859, he noticed a small black
dot on the face of the Sun,[4] which he was studying
with his modest 3.75 inches (95 mm) refractor. Thinking it to be a
sunspot, Lescarbault was not at first surprised, but after
some time had passed he realized that it was moving. Having
observed the transit of Mercury in 1845, he guessed that
what he was observing was another transit, but of a
previously undiscovered body. He took some hasty
measurements of its position and direction of motion, and
using an old clock and a pendulum with which he took his
patients’ pulses, he estimated the duration of the transit
at 1 hour, 17 minutes and 9 seconds.
Among the earlier
alleged observers of Vulcan, the following are the most
noteworthy:[6]
- Gruithuisen, on 26 June 1819,
reported seeing "two small spots … on the Sun, round,
black and unequal in size"
- Pastorff, on 23 October 1822,
24 and 25 July 1823, six times in 1834, on 18 October
1836, 1 November 1836 and on 16 February 1837, also
claimed to have seen two spots; the larger was 3
arcseconds across, and the smaller 1.25 arcseconds.
None of these claims
has ever been substantiated after more than thirty years of
observation. It
has been surmised, however, that some of these objects -
and other alleged intra-Mercurial objects - may exist, being nothing more than
previously unknown comets or small asteroids. Today, the
search continues for these so-called vulcanoid asteroids, which are thought to
exist in the region where Vulcan was once sought. None have
been found yet and searches have ruled out any such
asteroids larger than about 60 km[citation needed]. Neither SOHO nor STEREO have detected a planet
inside the orbit of Mercury.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vulcan_%28planet%29
List of
observations of solar and lunar transits of unknown objects
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_observations_of_solar_and_lunar_transits_of_unknown_objects
Saturday, March
26,1859 – A French amateur astronomer claims to have noticed
a planet closer to the Sun than Mercury – later named
Vulcan.
20th of Adar II, 5619
Sunday, August
28 – Friday, September 2 – The solar storm of 1859, the
largest geomagnetic solar storm on record, causes the
Northern lights to be visible as far south as Cuba and
knocks out telegraph communication. (This is also called the
Carrington event).
28th of Av,
5619 - 3rd of Elul, 5619
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1859
"Fair Use For Information And Discussion Purposes"
Kimberly