Je ne sais pas si tu (vous) as lu la retranscription des commentaires des différents témoins :
Citer:
What the f… is this? Shit! It is
moving!
But it comes and goes. Suddenly it
goes far away, and then it comes back.
Looks like a star when it stands still. But suddenly it goes far away, and
suddenly it comes back. Can’t reach it now. Damn, how it…
Now it is far away.
It is over there now. There are the stars, next to each other.
See? They’re blinking like normal. Now it is in the middle. Then… it is a star underneath.
It comes and goes this one as well.
Look, I keep the camera still.
It went away again. Damn, it’s moving.
There it is.
It is moving around you know.
Strange that it came from so far away.
Such a long distance. It is getting higher.
Can’t find it. It is higher.
There.It is moving so fast… almost can’t get it.
A 22:36, il montre à son ami que la source lumineuse est bien dans le ciel :
Citer:
It is in the sky? Agree?
Can you see the star next to it?
Yes? I’ll zoom in on it so it shows that it is in the sky.
Yes. Can you see that star?
Yes.
Reste à vérifier tout ça mais plusieurs possibilités & effets peuvent probablement rendre compte des mouvements erratiques de la source lumineuse (liste non exhaustive) :
-L'autokinésie (pour les mouvements horizontaux & verticaux) mais dans ce cas, pourquoi ne se produisent ils que sur cette seule source lumineuse ?
-Un effet lié à la réfraction et diffraction atmosphérique (cela se produit généralement bas sur l'horizon)
-L'opacité plus ou moins grande des nuages ou de la brume peut donner l'illusion que la source se rapproche ou s'éloigne
Soit le machin a réellement bougé comme ils le disent...
++
Buck