Post by brillbilly on Jun 18, 2024 3:49:11 GMT 10
NASA SPACE CRAFT COVER UP..these are not the ISS
QUOTE!..This Professor of Experimental Astronomy below saw my space telescope films i had capture and sent me this and many more from him and NASA From:Gerry Gilmore (gil@ast.cam.ac.uk) Sent: Thu 1/18/07 3:37 AM To: john lenard johnwalsonmoon@yahoo.com Hello again, and again my congratulations on your superb astrophotography You are clearly getting some images at almost the diffraction limit of your telescope. In the very sharpest images there are hints of diffraction rings visible on the edges of the satellites. That is of course the absolute limit of optical performance, and is only rarely attained. Interestingly, the process you have, of using a high-quality imaging system, with fast read-out, and then selecting the rare `perfect' images is something which has been developed and applied somewhat by one of my colleagues here. You might like to look at our local web page presenting some of this: You might also be interested in a journal produced by the MIT Lincoln Laboratory - which is the group which has built some of the things you are seeing. Much of what they do is what used to be the Star wars project, which no doubt involves some of your objects. They don't talk about the military satellites, of course, but there are many dicussions of earth surveillance, and related issues. It is distributed only to academic organisations, so you may need to get your local library to borrow it, but you may be able to get this (for free) from Subscription Coordinator Room L-054 Lincoln Laboratory MIT 244 Wood Street Lexington MA 0240-9185HENNY USA best regards Gerry Professor of Experimental Astronomy Gerry Gilmore gilastcamacuk www.amazon.co.uk/Secret-Progr...UNQUOTE!
So who is watching who?
QUOTE!..This Professor of Experimental Astronomy below saw my space telescope films i had capture and sent me this and many more from him and NASA From:Gerry Gilmore (gil@ast.cam.ac.uk) Sent: Thu 1/18/07 3:37 AM To: john lenard johnwalsonmoon@yahoo.com Hello again, and again my congratulations on your superb astrophotography You are clearly getting some images at almost the diffraction limit of your telescope. In the very sharpest images there are hints of diffraction rings visible on the edges of the satellites. That is of course the absolute limit of optical performance, and is only rarely attained. Interestingly, the process you have, of using a high-quality imaging system, with fast read-out, and then selecting the rare `perfect' images is something which has been developed and applied somewhat by one of my colleagues here. You might like to look at our local web page presenting some of this: You might also be interested in a journal produced by the MIT Lincoln Laboratory - which is the group which has built some of the things you are seeing. Much of what they do is what used to be the Star wars project, which no doubt involves some of your objects. They don't talk about the military satellites, of course, but there are many dicussions of earth surveillance, and related issues. It is distributed only to academic organisations, so you may need to get your local library to borrow it, but you may be able to get this (for free) from Subscription Coordinator Room L-054 Lincoln Laboratory MIT 244 Wood Street Lexington MA 0240-9185HENNY USA best regards Gerry Professor of Experimental Astronomy Gerry Gilmore gilastcamacuk www.amazon.co.uk/Secret-Progr...UNQUOTE!
So who is watching who?