Prometheus! Drawing in debris from rings..Prometheus, orbiting near the streamer-channels it has created in the thin F ring, casts a shadow on the A ring in this image taken a little more than a week after the planet's August 2009 equinox.
A closer look with enhancements reveals the culprit. There are a number of Unscientific theories as to what Promotheus really is. Top of the list is the possiblity that the bullet shaped moonlet is a space craft of some kind. The structure does indeed reveal a number of anomalies on the surface, after being enhanced for better viewing! http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA12593
Extrapulating the similar signature of a rogue moon orbiting a gas giant (in this case Saturn) and its subsequent affect on its rings it wouldn't be a leap of faith to forward this as a very strong explanation. To be clear, it's not prometheus orbiting Jupiter but something very very close. With time-lapse photography and remote color data to hand its almost a twin but Im biased toward prometheus doing a better more spectacular job. Just look at Sarurns rings! Cheers
-- Edited by TheWatcher on Tuesday 29th of January 2013 10:01:49 AM
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HENRI BERGSON, Matter and Memory
One has not only an ability to perceive the world but an ability to alter one's perception of it; more simply, one can change things by the manner in which one looks at them.
It was on projectcamelots site, but I couldn't find it there luckily it's still on youtube. Another fun thing to do is to try and buy the Ring Makers Of Saturn. It's outrageous.
I also do begin a venture which pertained to the electrical powered car and it is nearly similar to achieve. Now I am looking for the new writing and cones which could be beneficial regarding the promotion of my venture. Any suggestion? really motivate you...
Maybe I found something interesting here. I was digging for hours on Nasa´s website searching for old Voyager 1 & 2 images till Voyager 2's P-21779 image cought me by surprise after zooming in and putting some filters on it.
Jupiter's rings in a nutshell: Okay...here we go
Voyager 2's image labeled P-21779
This image of Jupiter's rings was taken by Voyager 2 looking back towards Jupiter from inside its shadow one day after its flyby in 1979. The thin jovian ring makes up the two orange lines to the left of the image. The blue and red arc is the limb of Jupiter, backlit by the Sun. The lower ring is cut short by Jupiter's shadow. The image was produced from two images taken through the orange and violet filters from a distance of almost 1.5 million km. Jupiter is 71,500 km in radius and north is at 11:00. (Voyager 2, P-21779)High resolution tif file (5.6 Mb)
On the first image I squared out the area of interest and in the second image I zoomed in and marked out some details in reference to Norm Bergrun´s book "Ringmakers of Saturn". The third image is a negative of the second image.
I see this topic has already had some debate at other forums. but few if any took the time to look deeper into the image.
I think the luminous source could be a Jovian moon, it has a magnetic field as can be seen in your last enhanced image, it shows the emissions being deflected around the moon , the ship(s) itself is an elongated object and looks to be made of sections, as can be seen by reducing the contrast, inverting the image will confirm this, if you look just beneath the object you can even see the objects reflection off the rings
As for what the ship is doing it is just open to conjecture at this point, there is no doubt the venture is huge, it is clear that each section would have to be the size of a small moon, the technology and engineering that has gone into creating something so huge and functional is staggering
This really is an important anomaly that deserves more study and credit for what it shows us.
Thank you
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"Creating a fiction when stating a fact destroys the credibility of the truth one are trying to convey"
Maybe I found something interesting here. I was digging for hours on Nasa´s website searching for old Voyager 1 & 2 images till Voyager 2's P-21779 image cought me by surprise after zooming in and putting some filters on it.
Jupiter's rings in a nutshell: Okay...here we go
Voyager 2's image labeled P-21779
This image of Jupiter's rings was taken by Voyager 2 looking back towards Jupiter from inside its shadow one day after its flyby in 1979. The thin jovian ring makes up the two orange lines to the left of the image. The blue and red arc is the limb of Jupiter, backlit by the Sun. The lower ring is cut short by Jupiter's shadow. The image was produced from two images taken through the orange and violet filters from a distance of almost 1.5 million km. Jupiter is 71,500 km in radius and north is at 11:00. (Voyager 2, P-21779)High resolution tif file (5.6 Mb)
On the first image I squared out the area of interest and in the second image I zoomed in and marked out some details in reference to Norm Bergrun´s book "Ringmakers of Saturn". The third image is a negative of the second image.