Monday, July 21, 2008

Best UFO footage ever?

The Internet video ‘Best UFO footage ever?’ was recorded by Dr. Willem Heijster, from Breda, The Netherlands on August 10, 1989 near Estepona, Spain. The object in the video appears to be a stationary cloud in an otherwise cloudless sky, but its surface exhibits strange turbulent behavior. If the object in this video is a genuine Antimatter Matter Object (AMMO) then we can speculate about its natural properties. Equivalent matter and antimatter subatomic particles exhibit opposite electrostatic and magnetic forces. The antimatter hypothesis is that equivalent matter and antimatter subatomic particles also exhibit opposite gravitational forces.


Of necessity, antimatter is extraterrestrial in origin, since matter and antimatter annihilate each other. Without lateral momentum and avoiding a direct collision with solid matter, AMMO on a collision course with Earth would decelerate and hover. Einstein discovered the equivalence of gravity and acceleration. When a meteor composed of matter falls to Earth it accelerates, since with gravitational forces like attracts like. However, AMMO decelerates and hovers since opposite gravitational forces either repel or neutralize each other. If gravity and acceleration are equivalent, then within a gravitational field antigravity produces deceleration, hovering, or acceleration in the opposite direction.

Electrons are attracted by the electrostatic force to antimatter surface positrons. This produces a bubble-like shimmering surface reminiscent of mercury. Electrons are negatively charged, and water vapor molecules are electric dipoles. Among all the constituents of air, most do not exhibit the property of electric dipoles. Therefore, in a high humidity environment, water vapor would attract by electrostatic forces to antimatter. The incident in the video occurred offshore a beach in Spain, which is consistent with AMMO. The negative end of a water vapor dipole would attract to antimatter surface positrons, or the positive end of a water vapor dipole would attract to antimatter antiprotons. Held in place, water vapor would then concentrate and condense out of the atmosphere around this charged attractor. From the outside it appears cloudlike, which is again consistent with AMMO in conjunction with water vapor.

When zoomed in the object in the video resembles Saturn, a ball in the center surrounded by an inner tube torus. Ions in a magnetic field traverse field lines in a spiral, like an electromagnet. Ions cause auroras at Earth’s poles. But water vapor is composed of dipoles, not ions. It appears that water vapor molecules are concentrating in the equivalent of Van Allen Belts around antimatter with its own magnetic field. Near the end of the video this message appears, ‘the object was there for about an hour and then fade (sic) away like smoke.’ In the end the hovering antimatter dissolved. The slow rate of dissolve and stable position implies high density antimatter exhibiting magnetism like an asteroid. Gamma radiation would eject positrons from the metallic antimatter, via the photoelectric effect, to annihilate electrons and start a chain reaction. The behavior of the object in this video is consistent with the properties of antimatter with antigravity.

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