A green jellyfish hangs over Norway. The aurora borealis illuminated a strange jellyfish-like object in the sky
Norwegian amateur photographer Per-Arne Milkalsen witnessed an amazing phenomenon. Observing the northern lights on January 20 of this year, he noticed a jellyfish-like object in the sky. Medusa was the same ghostly green color as the glow. Milkalsen managed to photograph her.
“I have been fond of the northern lights for more than 25 years, I follow them, take pictures, but have never seen anything like it,” the author of the photographs says about the “jellyfish”.
Experts consider the green object to be real. But they still find it difficult to identify it.
“This is not a lens flare or a shooting defect,” says Lynn Hansen, a leading specialist at the Tromso Geophysical Observatory Truls.
Of the sound hypotheses that do not involve aliens in explanations, only one has been put forward. It is not excluded that Milkalsen photographed the aircraft after all, but not the aliens' saucer, but the earth's satellite. For example, a communications satellite with deployed solar panels. Some of them have several batteries. The surface could act like a mirror and reflect the "bunny" created by the light of the northern lights to the Earth. He is, of course, weak, but noticeable. Such a reflection could get into the lens of an amateur to photograph beautiful glow.
By the way, solar batteries of satellites or their antennas sometimes throw very powerful sunbeams with a diameter of more than 10 kilometers to the surface. The light source in this case looks like a very bright point, similar to a UFO. Can move around.
Experts doubt that the photographer was able to capture the so-called Sprite - a mysterious plasma phenomenon reminiscent of a lightning bolt. It looks like a jellyfish. But it occurs at altitudes of about 100 kilometers, and is seen, as a rule, from orbit, and not from the Earth.