AdamI
Skilled Investigator
I suppose this doesn't quite belong in UFOs, but it's the best match.
I was listening to an old Art Bell show as I work... one of the old "Ghost to Ghost" episodes. They're a fun listen.
Anyway, during the show a caller called in with something other than a ghost story. The call is fascinating. The caller claims... well... listen to the clip... I cut it out and stuck it online here:
http://66.246.138.121/2000-04-25_ET_Signal_Caller.mp3
The caller claims that they've tracked signals along trajectories resembling what you'd expect from an object traveling through space at a fraction of the speed of light. The signals (perhaps including the infamous SETI "WOW" signal) are not there when you look again because, the caller claims, the objects are moving. But if you look a degree or two away along a straight line, it's there again.
Anyone ever hear of this? I never have. Absolutely fascinating. What a random find!
Edit:
What fascinates me about this one is that it's theoretically testable. If someone could somehow track down this information or one of these "maps," you could try aiming a large radio telescope at the expected location of the object(s) today given their speed.
I was listening to an old Art Bell show as I work... one of the old "Ghost to Ghost" episodes. They're a fun listen.
Anyway, during the show a caller called in with something other than a ghost story. The call is fascinating. The caller claims... well... listen to the clip... I cut it out and stuck it online here:
http://66.246.138.121/2000-04-25_ET_Signal_Caller.mp3
The caller claims that they've tracked signals along trajectories resembling what you'd expect from an object traveling through space at a fraction of the speed of light. The signals (perhaps including the infamous SETI "WOW" signal) are not there when you look again because, the caller claims, the objects are moving. But if you look a degree or two away along a straight line, it's there again.
Anyone ever hear of this? I never have. Absolutely fascinating. What a random find!
Edit:
What fascinates me about this one is that it's theoretically testable. If someone could somehow track down this information or one of these "maps," you could try aiming a large radio telescope at the expected location of the object(s) today given their speed.