SALISBURY
July of 1992 or 1993
I saw an unusual sight while walking on Salisbury Beach (on the Mass-NH boarder) one mid-July evening about 11 pm... It was somewhere around 92 or 93... That evening there was a fairly active meteor shower occurring , so me and a friend were walking down the beach checking them out, when he said "Hey, look at that" and pointed to the southeast. I saw what appeared to be a satellite in terms of size of the dot of white light and its speed.
When first spotted the object, it was about 2/3 of the distance from the horizon to straight overhead , and it was headed towards the southwest horizon. But what was so peculiar about this object was it was moving exactly like a SINE WAVE ! First it would move left in a straight line, and then bend back to the right, back and forth, all the while continuing to drop towards the horizon.
The amplitude (peak to peak) of the sine wave path was approximately 3 fists wide extended at arms length. It was definitely slower than the meteor. How could a meteor move back and forth like that ? How could a satellite ? When you couple the forward momentum with the side to side motion of the sine wave path, and you also assume that the object was at a typical elevation for a satellite, you don't have to be a genius to realize the g-forces alone should have made this motion impossible for any type of object, man-made satellite or natural meteor... and was one. Just like satellites do, the object dimmed out at about 45 degree elevation, give or take. Thus, we saw the object for all of perhaps 5-10 seconds.
However, I've attempted to logically analyze this event, and the sticking point to me for this explanation would be the g-forces acting on the object...
(Source http://www.ufoinfo.com)
July of 1992 or 1993
I saw an unusual sight while walking on Salisbury Beach (on the Mass-NH boarder) one mid-July evening about 11 pm... It was somewhere around 92 or 93... That evening there was a fairly active meteor shower occurring , so me and a friend were walking down the beach checking them out, when he said "Hey, look at that" and pointed to the southeast. I saw what appeared to be a satellite in terms of size of the dot of white light and its speed.
When first spotted the object, it was about 2/3 of the distance from the horizon to straight overhead , and it was headed towards the southwest horizon. But what was so peculiar about this object was it was moving exactly like a SINE WAVE ! First it would move left in a straight line, and then bend back to the right, back and forth, all the while continuing to drop towards the horizon.
The amplitude (peak to peak) of the sine wave path was approximately 3 fists wide extended at arms length. It was definitely slower than the meteor. How could a meteor move back and forth like that ? How could a satellite ? When you couple the forward momentum with the side to side motion of the sine wave path, and you also assume that the object was at a typical elevation for a satellite, you don't have to be a genius to realize the g-forces alone should have made this motion impossible for any type of object, man-made satellite or natural meteor... and was one. Just like satellites do, the object dimmed out at about 45 degree elevation, give or take. Thus, we saw the object for all of perhaps 5-10 seconds.
However, I've attempted to logically analyze this event, and the sticking point to me for this explanation would be the g-forces acting on the object...
(Source http://www.ufoinfo.com)