This system belongs to us.Voodoomancer said:"Oops, I accidentally the sky" ?
So maybe it IS the russians then, about to DD Norway?Baron Khaine said:Military Experts are calling this a Cynosural Field.
Props for the reference.
[sub](Props if you get that)[/sub]
Actually, we do have some rocket scientists here. And physics students. And med students, as illustrated in the "Zombie Pig Juice" thing.Cryo84R said:For fucks sake, we have a lot of rocket scientists here.
Sorry to burst your bubbles but this was yet another failed Bulva missile test. Like most Russian military tech, it shits itself more often than not.
Storm-meteorologist Hilde Holdhus is nevertheless certain that it was a rocket launch people witnessed.
- It matches the path the light followed, she says. The blue track is probably smoke from the rocket.
Her colleague Inge Johannessen agrees.
- Right now there is a range of moist air 8-9000 meters up in the atmosphere, and the rings are formed when the bright light from the rocket gets refracted by a thin layer of ice crystals, he says.
- A halo, much like the rings that we sometimes see around the moon.
The long exposure time of the images make the rings grow into a luminous disk with a spiral pattern.
I've got my batton, C17 here I come. Spying on the combine will be everso much fun. "I never really was on your side" *laughs*ShadowKirby said:Dude, where is my crowbar?
LMFAO! HA! So true!Jonny49 said:If you listen very closely, you can hear all the alien fanatics in the world jizz in their pants and jump onto the internet forum train.