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KnewEyes

Joined: 23 Apr 2001
Posts: 667
Location: under those cloud-like things |
Patriotic colored chemtrails?
Thu Jan 10, 2002 8:04 am
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I found this post, and was wondering if anyone else has seen anything like this. Red, and Blue now, along with the regular whities we see. I was noticing the blue sky yesterday,,, the part that wasnt covered, and I said Hey! I have NEVER seen that color blue sky here before, it was a beautiful richly colored aqua blue, like you see in the carribean,, or the color of the water in the Florida keys. I never in my life saw such a pretty colored sky around here before. They really just may be "painting the sky". Seems like they would prefer we had an 'opaque',can't-see-thru type of atmosphere.
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Date: January 09, 2002 at 22:01:44
From: Jack,
Subject: Weird shimmering in LA sky
We drive from the Foothill-LaCresenta locale into Pasadena 3 times a week on the 210 Frwy , and noticed thick rich blood clouds over the entire San Gabriel Valley all the way out to at least West Covina and perhaps beyond. When entering this zone we always now make sure the vents are closed and windows up tight.
On at two occasions for sure we noticed red exhaust being emmited by a chemtrail jet. With the air then permeating into a softer red within 2 hrs afterwards. On another occasion I alone noticed while riding my racing bike in netween chemtrail spraying - momentary clearing- another chemtrail jet emmiting "blue" exhuast materil with the same effect following as the first jet. Someone we know has also mentioned seeing"green" gas particulates being emmited by a chem jet. Have never heard of green stuff before.
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Listen
Joined: 10 Dec 2001
Posts: 17
Location: right state of mind |
Thu Jan 10, 2002 8:48 pm
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I saw a blue streak across a large chemcloud... |
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penumbra

Joined: 24 Apr 2001
Posts: 672
Location: North Carolina |
Thu Jan 10, 2002 11:13 pm
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KnewEyes- I see the sky-blue colored chemtrails frequently. They almost blend in to the background. I have very good eyesight, but I think alot of people might not see them. Almost all "clouds" either have a blue or reddish tint. I haven't seen the green, but my daughter has seen green "clouds" at night. Seems like I read that the green was a particular barium release experiment. |
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KnewEyes

Joined: 23 Apr 2001
Posts: 667
Location: under those cloud-like things |
Fri Jan 11, 2002 12:45 am
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Funny how this article on a "study of the color of the atmosphere" pops up today of all days. Color is important..
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99991775
The Universe is turquoise, say astronomers
14:43 10 January 02
Eugenie Samuel, Washington DC
Astronomers have revealed the true colour of the Universe - it is somewhere between "pale turquoise and medium aquamarine".
The discovery may appear to be as useless as the "answer" to life, the Universe and everything given in the Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy - 42 - but the colour is helping the astronomers trace the history of star formation.
Ivan Baldry and Karl Glazebrook at John Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland, found the cosmic colour by combining light from over 200,000 galaxies within two billion light years of Earth. They worked with data from the Australian 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey at the Anglo-Australian Observatory in New South Wales, Australia.
Combining the light gave a spectrum with a peak in the blue part of the optical spectrum - due to the large number of young stars burning hydrogen - and another in the red part of the spectrum -due to the glow of older red giants burning heavier elements.
Researchers can analyse such spectrums like fossils, to reveal the history of star formation in a given galaxy. But this is the first time anyone has calculated a spectrum for enough galaxies to be representative of the whole Universe.
"Not my favourite colour"
When Baldry and Glazebrook worked out how their spectrum would appear to the human eye, which is not equally sensitive to all wavelengths of light, they came up with a pale green.
"It's not my favourite colour," says Glazebrook. "It's on the greenish side of white, a subtle colour." For any computer buffs wishing to put the colour on their desktops, the red-green-blue values you will need are 0.269, 0.388 and 0.342.
Glazebrook and Baldry have already used their result to rule out some models of star formation. In 1994, astronomers working with images of the early Universe from the Hubble Space Telescope claimed that star formation in the Universe was slow to start with, peaked around six billion years ago, and has tailed off towards the present day.
But Glazebrook says such a scenario would produce a redder colour than is seen, because more old red stars from the early Universe would still be around. "We take account of star death in our model as well," he says.
Instead Glazebrook believes star formation peaked one to two million years after the Big Bang. This is consistent with results announced by NASA on Tuesday. At that time, the Universe was mainly blue, due to the large number of young stars, but it's now greening out and will turn red as stars age over the next five billion years.
The new research was presented at the American Astronomical Society meeting in Washington DC.
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penumbra

Joined: 24 Apr 2001
Posts: 672
Location: North Carolina |
Fri Jan 11, 2002 2:41 am
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More about colors...
MSFC STATUS REPORT: COMBINED RELEASE AND RADIATION EFFECTS SATELLITE
1/14/91:
Two chemical releases from the Combined Release and Radiation Effects Satellite were successfully accomplished over the weekend. The first was a 1.5 kg. (3.3 lb.) barium release at 8:17 p.m. CST Saturday. It resulted in a cloud which glowed bright green initially and then changed to a dimmer purplish blue as the barium atoms ionized upon exposure to sunlight. This release, one
of 7 scheduled this month, was for the G-2 experiment of NASA's CRRES science program. The G-2 release is one in a series of 4
involving injection of barium ions at different altitudes, all above the Earth's atmosphere in the magnetosphere. The injections of barium ions are intended to simulate natural plasma injections under precisely controlled conditions, to understand how different regions of the magnetosphere react to the artificial cloud
plasmas.
The second release was a 0.74 kg. (1.6 lb.) lithium release at 1:05 a.m. Sunday, producing a red glow in the night sky. It
was performed for the G-7 experiment, which involved gathering comparative data with two other satellites in addition to the CRRES. The release was timed to coincide with certain positions of CRRES and NASA's Dynamics Explorer-1 as well as the Japanese
AKEBONO satellite. All three satellites have instruments for tracking the artificially injected lithium ions. Data from the
other two satellites will be compared with that obtained by CRRES. The data will also provide a more complete picture of the
ion-release phenomena than possible using one satellite as the measurement platform.
"The chemical release operations went off without a hitch," said Dr. David Reasoner, CRRES project scientist at the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala. "The satellite and the U.S. Air Force satellite control facility performed flawlessly. The optical instruments at the observing sites were pointed precisely at the release."
Good visual sighting reports of the glowing cloud created in each case were received from observers in widely separated
locations of North America and the Caribbean.
The next release opportunity in the current series of CRRES experiments is Monday night (Jan. 14) at approximately 10:12 p.m.
CST. Researchers hope to use that opportunity for another experiment in the G-1 through G-4 series. The release altitude
will be roughly double that of the Saturday night barium experiment.
http://spacelink.nasa.gov/NASA.Projects/Earth.Science/Atmosphere/CRRES/Status.Reports/91-01-14
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