I guess I was looking at the wrong video. An anomaly within the pod doesn’t explain how they got vectored to it from a ships radar
I guess I was looking at the wrong video. An anomaly within the pod doesn’t explain how they got vectored to it from a ships radar
I think that's a pretty far stretch. The pod isn't going to take an auto track on an optical anomaly...anyway, that would be easily ruled out by comparing it with other video from some other time during flight.It does roll very slightly back toward the right when the "rotation" occurs. The object also stops tracking across the clouds in the background. Note that the "rotation" coincides with the flir azimuth reaching zero degrees L/R of ADL. Again, I don't fly with these pods, but I think that's significant and possibly indicative of an optical artifact as it's tracked across the ADL. It looks a little bit like a lens flare. It's obviously not an alien craft, so I'm just spit-balling at other plausible explanations.
Time 2:44 below
Whatever it is they're looking at, it's flying through the sky and manuevering. Probably a Growler trying to find the tanker.
I guess I was looking at the wrong video. An anomaly within the pod doesn’t explain how they got vectored to it from a ships radar
Whatever the explanation has to also account for an S-band radar looking up from the surface holding firm track on it, apparently all day.
An order came in for him to suspend the exercise and do some “real-world tasking,” about 60 miles west of their location, Fravor said. He said he was told by the command that there were some unidentified flying objects descending from 80,000 feet to 20,000 feet and disappearing; he said officials told him they had been tracking a couple dozen of these objects for a few weeks.
WSO says at one point there's a "fleet" of them and says to look on the SA page, so the whatevers were in the Link too.
Appearing on the SA page doesn't mean they were in the link.
I think the whole thing is pretty interesting, primarily the fact that there was a special access program to look into such reports - the most credible of which I always would have assumed could be explained by our own similarly-classified programs. Of course, compartmentalization being what it is, that's still a viable explanation.
Whatever the explanation has to also account for an S-band radar looking up from the surface holding firm track on it, apparently all day.
Having seen what raw radar picks up I'm not surprised that there may have been a track out there even if it wasn't for reals, even all day.