Gosh I sure hope you're right. The trouble is... I've thought of the pixelation effect before when I've seen stars of different shapes with apparent pixels in them. Sometimes the pixels in images are much stronger than they are in this one. For this reason, I've tried to enlarge other images of other things several times, I don't get any pixelation. Also, I've been doing this same thing a lot for 2 years. This is the very first time I've ever seen a rectangular shape. Usually, weird star shapes with pixels in them, (not all of them have those), look like boxes piled onto each other in bizarre patterns that aren't exactly squares or circles. Thanks for the other information. That could apply to some of what I've seen, but probably just to some. You wouldn't believe how bizarre some of what I've seen has been!
Strange happenings on earth and in the skies. It's hard to know sometimes what is "real" and what is not. We like to think that we know a lot-- secrets of the universe. We really know little. Why do some people think they have some right to screw with the Creation. Arrogant, ignorant people that think they can improve things greater than them. Yesterday was a beautiful, wonderfully warm day in the southeast US. Later there appeared various jet "contrails". Soon after, it became increasingly cloudy. By just before sunset (hidden by clouds), clouds of every description mingled together. Thick clouds, wispy clouds, clouds that looked shredded or blown apart. Not natural. Who gave my government or anybody else the right to mess with our sky, our weather, our health? Geo-engineering is pure evil, the work of Saran. Fair warning: Stop interferring with nature. Leave us alone. If you don't cease we will stop you by whatever means available to us.
The star Sirius looks insane through my telescope! (1:40)
I like this explanation the best, but no pictures. (Sirius can also appear triangular or rectangular depending where you're viewing it from, especially without any visual equipment, light can affect it too.)
By Phil Harrington
On cold winter nights, the faint glow of the Milky Way flows southward past Orion the Hunter, through the large dog Canis Major, and disappears below the horizon. In its wake are many wonderful open star clusters that call us out from the warmth of our homes into winter’s chill.
Let’s begin our tour at brilliant Sirius (Alpha [α] Canis Majoris), the brightest star in the night sky. Sirius always looks striking through binoculars, but it is even more dazzling on winter nights immediately after a cold front passes. The turbulent upper layers of our atmosphere play havoc with the light from this white main sequence star, causing a strobelike kaleidoscope effect that pulses through nearly every color of the rainbow. Watching it can be almost hypnotic.
Hi Daisy, not sure what position in the sky you saw this, or of the light factor around your area is.
The second picture and description of the twinkling stars that appear to be moving leads me to believe what I began seeing around this time last year, and with my binoculars looked like a group of stars very close to each other, and thought my eyes were playing tricks on me. I always check https://www.timeanddate.com/astronomy/night/ to see what's in my area, and what an object might be. In this case I found four objects in the area I saw it. Procyon, Betelgeuse, Rigel, and Sirius. Two of them were in the constellation Orion which is easy to spot, so I went back out and it wasn't either but just below and to the left. So it was Sirius, but it doesn't show a multitude of stars, as some do have clusters not visible without a telescope. So I started digging and here's what I came up with. Sirius is also in a constellation, Canis Major and in the southern sky, and too low for me to see the whole thing except at particular times of the year and night.
All stars can appear to be twinkling or flicker as they shine through the Earth’s atmosphere with varying density, turbulent air, and particles.
Sirius appears to twinkle/flicker more than other stars as it’s brightness exaggerates these atmospheric effects. For those in the northern hemisphere, Sirius is lower in the sky where there is a thicker atmosphere.
Hi: Thanks for this information. It was just a random star like the ones I've been video taping and photographing for two years. I'm about to post an update (probably tomorrow) with an attached video someone sent me of a person who has a better camera and shows stars changing colors, shapes, positions, etc. The movement the video shows is the movement I see. The shapes are similar as well. The video is also of random stars. What I think now is that the rectangle was probably just one position one 'star' held for a fraction of a second (the time it took for me to photograph it). In the video I'm going to post, a star can be seen taking the shape of a square fairly often. I've seen stars take shapes that were almost squares, but this was the first time I saw a rectangle, so I found it exceptionally strange. There's something going on with what we've been told about stars that doesn't make sense. The star maps etc. may all be a lie. Or, perhaps more likely, there may be a lot of 'star-like' twinkling things out there that we assume are stars, but are in fact something else. Stay tuned for the update coming soon.
I see you use a microscope for blood analysis, a telescope would be far better than a phone for pictures and video. Zooming on the device might actually be better than trying to enlarge a photo, but our devices will only allow so much magnification.
I would like to acquire a decent one, but the cost for a good one is an extravagance to be sure, and I don't really have a good location to justify it.
I agree there is so much up there we're not being told about. If you look for Polaris on the night sky link center it on the map full screen, and then click on any star or planet starting with the closest to it you will see that they all rotate around it.
Search for that and they say it isn't necessarily so. They also say Polaris is a cluster of stars, which of course would require a good telescope to delineate.
I've been observing a rectangular shaped 'Star' in the Western Sky in northern NY for about 6 months now. It's obviously not a star because it never moves. And it is too low for a 'star' per se, as on a very cloudy night when no stars are visible, this one is visible., as bright as ever ... sitting in a cloud bank.
Wow! That's interesting! I'm glad I saw this now, because a friend just sent me a video showing continuous changes in 'stars,' which led me to conclude the rectangle might have just been a momentary change I captured in a still photo. If you have been seeing a rectangle that doesn't change, the plot thickens. I'll be posting an update shortly.
I've received some other information since I posted this article, and will be releasing an update shortly. We have clearly been lied to, (or not told the complete truth about stars - unless rectangles are discussed in astronomy courses and I just don't know). Stay tuned for an update to that post I'm preparing now.
Gosh I sure hope you're right. The trouble is... I've thought of the pixelation effect before when I've seen stars of different shapes with apparent pixels in them. Sometimes the pixels in images are much stronger than they are in this one. For this reason, I've tried to enlarge other images of other things several times, I don't get any pixelation. Also, I've been doing this same thing a lot for 2 years. This is the very first time I've ever seen a rectangular shape. Usually, weird star shapes with pixels in them, (not all of them have those), look like boxes piled onto each other in bizarre patterns that aren't exactly squares or circles. Thanks for the other information. That could apply to some of what I've seen, but probably just to some. You wouldn't believe how bizarre some of what I've seen has been!
You might get a kick out of recording the new “lightning” storms in slow motion…
It's a 6G, Low-dog, Oblong, Elon, star fridge....
C'mon, sing-a-long...😂😁
The real stars are further back in the firmanent, and not part of the cashless society program.😁
Strange happenings on earth and in the skies. It's hard to know sometimes what is "real" and what is not. We like to think that we know a lot-- secrets of the universe. We really know little. Why do some people think they have some right to screw with the Creation. Arrogant, ignorant people that think they can improve things greater than them. Yesterday was a beautiful, wonderfully warm day in the southeast US. Later there appeared various jet "contrails". Soon after, it became increasingly cloudy. By just before sunset (hidden by clouds), clouds of every description mingled together. Thick clouds, wispy clouds, clouds that looked shredded or blown apart. Not natural. Who gave my government or anybody else the right to mess with our sky, our weather, our health? Geo-engineering is pure evil, the work of Saran. Fair warning: Stop interferring with nature. Leave us alone. If you don't cease we will stop you by whatever means available to us.
Now we need to figure out how to stop these scum.
Very true!!!
Continued
https://earthsky.org/todays-image/photo-sirius-in-many-colors/#:~:text=These%20colors%20aren%E2%80%99t%20intrinsic%20to%20the%20star%2C%20but,Sirius%20%E2%80%93%20to%20shine%20in%20many%20sparkling%20colors%21
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ooeRUOZ0Gi4
Twinkling Sirius up close (13 Seconds)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1YQBBuL1Mdo
The star Sirius looks insane through my telescope! (1:40)
I like this explanation the best, but no pictures. (Sirius can also appear triangular or rectangular depending where you're viewing it from, especially without any visual equipment, light can affect it too.)
By Phil Harrington
On cold winter nights, the faint glow of the Milky Way flows southward past Orion the Hunter, through the large dog Canis Major, and disappears below the horizon. In its wake are many wonderful open star clusters that call us out from the warmth of our homes into winter’s chill.
Let’s begin our tour at brilliant Sirius (Alpha [α] Canis Majoris), the brightest star in the night sky. Sirius always looks striking through binoculars, but it is even more dazzling on winter nights immediately after a cold front passes. The turbulent upper layers of our atmosphere play havoc with the light from this white main sequence star, causing a strobelike kaleidoscope effect that pulses through nearly every color of the rainbow. Watching it can be almost hypnotic.
https://www.astronomy.com/observing/star-clusters-near-sirius/
Hi Daisy, not sure what position in the sky you saw this, or of the light factor around your area is.
The second picture and description of the twinkling stars that appear to be moving leads me to believe what I began seeing around this time last year, and with my binoculars looked like a group of stars very close to each other, and thought my eyes were playing tricks on me. I always check https://www.timeanddate.com/astronomy/night/ to see what's in my area, and what an object might be. In this case I found four objects in the area I saw it. Procyon, Betelgeuse, Rigel, and Sirius. Two of them were in the constellation Orion which is easy to spot, so I went back out and it wasn't either but just below and to the left. So it was Sirius, but it doesn't show a multitude of stars, as some do have clusters not visible without a telescope. So I started digging and here's what I came up with. Sirius is also in a constellation, Canis Major and in the southern sky, and too low for me to see the whole thing except at particular times of the year and night.
https://astrobackyard.com/sirius-star/ (Gives good background and how to locate)
Sirius is the Brightest Star in the Sky
Why does Sirius flicker?
All stars can appear to be twinkling or flicker as they shine through the Earth’s atmosphere with varying density, turbulent air, and particles.
Sirius appears to twinkle/flicker more than other stars as it’s brightness exaggerates these atmospheric effects. For those in the northern hemisphere, Sirius is lower in the sky where there is a thicker atmosphere.
Related Article: Why Do Stars Twinkle but planets don’t? https://earthsky.org/space/why-dont-planets-twinkle-as-stars-do/ (In Article)
Hi: Thanks for this information. It was just a random star like the ones I've been video taping and photographing for two years. I'm about to post an update (probably tomorrow) with an attached video someone sent me of a person who has a better camera and shows stars changing colors, shapes, positions, etc. The movement the video shows is the movement I see. The shapes are similar as well. The video is also of random stars. What I think now is that the rectangle was probably just one position one 'star' held for a fraction of a second (the time it took for me to photograph it). In the video I'm going to post, a star can be seen taking the shape of a square fairly often. I've seen stars take shapes that were almost squares, but this was the first time I saw a rectangle, so I found it exceptionally strange. There's something going on with what we've been told about stars that doesn't make sense. The star maps etc. may all be a lie. Or, perhaps more likely, there may be a lot of 'star-like' twinkling things out there that we assume are stars, but are in fact something else. Stay tuned for the update coming soon.
I see you use a microscope for blood analysis, a telescope would be far better than a phone for pictures and video. Zooming on the device might actually be better than trying to enlarge a photo, but our devices will only allow so much magnification.
I would like to acquire a decent one, but the cost for a good one is an extravagance to be sure, and I don't really have a good location to justify it.
I agree there is so much up there we're not being told about. If you look for Polaris on the night sky link center it on the map full screen, and then click on any star or planet starting with the closest to it you will see that they all rotate around it.
Search for that and they say it isn't necessarily so. They also say Polaris is a cluster of stars, which of course would require a good telescope to delineate.
Look forward to watching the video.
I've been observing a rectangular shaped 'Star' in the Western Sky in northern NY for about 6 months now. It's obviously not a star because it never moves. And it is too low for a 'star' per se, as on a very cloudy night when no stars are visible, this one is visible., as bright as ever ... sitting in a cloud bank.
Cool!
Wow! That's interesting! I'm glad I saw this now, because a friend just sent me a video showing continuous changes in 'stars,' which led me to conclude the rectangle might have just been a momentary change I captured in a still photo. If you have been seeing a rectangle that doesn't change, the plot thickens. I'll be posting an update shortly.
I'll watch for it. This is very interesting!
This is a bit disturbing. What could that be I wonder
I've received some other information since I posted this article, and will be releasing an update shortly. We have clearly been lied to, (or not told the complete truth about stars - unless rectangles are discussed in astronomy courses and I just don't know). Stay tuned for an update to that post I'm preparing now.
Can't wait!